Prime (mark) Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
This article is not about the symbol for the set of prime numbers, ℙ.The prime (′, Unicode 0x2032, ′) is neither an apostrophe (', Unicode 0x0027) nor an acute accent (´, Unicode 0x00B4). It has several uses:
- In set theory, A′ is the complement of the set A.
- A′ can mean a point related to A (e.g. by a transformation T).
- f′(x) is the first derivative (or derived function) of f(x).
- 42′ can mean 42 arcminutes (or sometimes, 42 minutes of time).
- 7′ can mean 7 feet.
- The prime can be used in the transliteration of some languages, such as Russian, where it is sometimes used to denote palatalization.
- f″(x) is the second derivative of f(x).
- 42″ can mean 42 arcseconds (or sometimes, 42 seconds of time, e.g. on some digital cameras).
- 7″ can mean 7 inches.
To avoid counting the number of primes, the notation f(n)(x) can be used to mean the nth derivative of f(x) when n is large.
Prime and double prime are often approximated by normal or italic apostrophes and quotation marks, (' or ', " or "), especially when the character set used does not include the prime or double prime character (e.g. ISO-Latin-1 is commonly assumed on IRC).
References: Unicode NamesList (rather large)
This is an Article on Prime (mark). Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Prime (mark)
