MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Sunday November 24, 2024
Jump to navigationJump to search
268 bytes added
, 18:40, 28 July 2011
Line 5: |
Line 5: |
| If the list of arguments is empty, as expressed in the form <math>\texttt{Mno}(),</math> then it cannot be true that exactly one of the arguments is false, so <math>\texttt{Mno}() = \texttt{False}.</math> | | If the list of arguments is empty, as expressed in the form <math>\texttt{Mno}(),</math> then it cannot be true that exactly one of the arguments is false, so <math>\texttt{Mno}() = \texttt{False}.</math> |
| | | |
− | If p is the only argument, then Mno(p) says that p is false, so Mno(p) = Not(p). | + | If <math>\texttt{p}</math> is the only argument, then <math>\texttt{Mno(p)}</math> says that <math>\texttt{p}</math> is false, so <math>\texttt{Mno(p)} = \texttt{Not(p)}.</math> |
| | | |
− | If p and q are the only two arguments, then Mno(p, q) says that exactly one of p, q is false, so Mno(p, q) says the same thing as p ≠ q. | + | If <math>\texttt{p}</math> and <math>\texttt{q}</math> are the only two arguments, then <math>\texttt{Mno(p, q)}</math> says that exactly one of <math>\texttt{p, q}</math> is false, so <math>\texttt{Mno(p, q)}</math> says the same thing as <math>\texttt{p} \neq \texttt{q}.</math> |
| | | |
− | The venn diagram for Mno(p, q, r) is shown in Figure 1. | + | The venn diagram for <math>\texttt{Mno(p, q, r)}</math> is shown in Figure 1. |
| | | |
| {| align="center" cellpadding="8" style="text-align:center" | | {| align="center" cellpadding="8" style="text-align:center" |
| | | | | |
| <p>[[Image:Venn Diagram (P,Q,R).jpg|500px]]</p> | | <p>[[Image:Venn Diagram (P,Q,R).jpg|500px]]</p> |
− | <p><math>\text{Figure 1.}~~\texttt{(p, q, r)}</math></p> | + | <p><math>\text{Figure 1.}~~\texttt{Mno(p, q, r)}</math></p> |
| |} | | |} |
| | | |