Standard Unicode symbols for logic operations












1












$begingroup$


There are these logic gates symbols, but I am looking for the more low-level math-like symbols such as those found here, but for all the logic operations. There doesn't seem to be a central place for them, but these seem close.



I would like to know if from your perspective those are the standard symbols, or if there are others.



AND ∧
OR ∨
XOR ⊻
XNOR ↔
NAND ↑
NOR ↓
NOT ¬


These are the only two that seem standard:



AND ∧
OR ∨


I'm not sure about the other ones, if there is a preferred set of symbols, or ones that are used most often in papers and the like.










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    They are all standard, and easily invoked in $LaTeX$.
    $endgroup$
    – David G. Stork
    Jan 11 at 6:19










  • $begingroup$
    The table for gates isn't entirely correct, it is quite common to make, for example, a Nor gate by putting circles on the inputs of an And gate, that is in fact the whole point of the symbolic notation.
    $endgroup$
    – DanielV
    Jan 11 at 13:07










  • $begingroup$
    Yes, these are relatively standard; you may also see $barwedge$ and $overline{vee}$ for NAND and NOR, and $oplus$ and $overline{oplus}$ for XOR and XNOR.
    $endgroup$
    – Deusovi
    Jan 11 at 17:59












  • $begingroup$
    The de facto standard for papers is to use $LaTeX$ (often together with packages like $mathtt{amssymb}$). If you use $LaTeX$, you don't need to know about Unicode. MathML defines a standard for mathematical content on the Web and includes definitions of a standard set of XML entities for mathematics and associated Unicode code points. MathJax which is used to enter and render mathematics on MSE uses MathML (and the $LaTeX$ interface supports a useful subset of the MathML entities).
    $endgroup$
    – Rob Arthan
    Jan 14 at 16:34
















1












$begingroup$


There are these logic gates symbols, but I am looking for the more low-level math-like symbols such as those found here, but for all the logic operations. There doesn't seem to be a central place for them, but these seem close.



I would like to know if from your perspective those are the standard symbols, or if there are others.



AND ∧
OR ∨
XOR ⊻
XNOR ↔
NAND ↑
NOR ↓
NOT ¬


These are the only two that seem standard:



AND ∧
OR ∨


I'm not sure about the other ones, if there is a preferred set of symbols, or ones that are used most often in papers and the like.










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    They are all standard, and easily invoked in $LaTeX$.
    $endgroup$
    – David G. Stork
    Jan 11 at 6:19










  • $begingroup$
    The table for gates isn't entirely correct, it is quite common to make, for example, a Nor gate by putting circles on the inputs of an And gate, that is in fact the whole point of the symbolic notation.
    $endgroup$
    – DanielV
    Jan 11 at 13:07










  • $begingroup$
    Yes, these are relatively standard; you may also see $barwedge$ and $overline{vee}$ for NAND and NOR, and $oplus$ and $overline{oplus}$ for XOR and XNOR.
    $endgroup$
    – Deusovi
    Jan 11 at 17:59












  • $begingroup$
    The de facto standard for papers is to use $LaTeX$ (often together with packages like $mathtt{amssymb}$). If you use $LaTeX$, you don't need to know about Unicode. MathML defines a standard for mathematical content on the Web and includes definitions of a standard set of XML entities for mathematics and associated Unicode code points. MathJax which is used to enter and render mathematics on MSE uses MathML (and the $LaTeX$ interface supports a useful subset of the MathML entities).
    $endgroup$
    – Rob Arthan
    Jan 14 at 16:34














1












1








1





$begingroup$


There are these logic gates symbols, but I am looking for the more low-level math-like symbols such as those found here, but for all the logic operations. There doesn't seem to be a central place for them, but these seem close.



I would like to know if from your perspective those are the standard symbols, or if there are others.



AND ∧
OR ∨
XOR ⊻
XNOR ↔
NAND ↑
NOR ↓
NOT ¬


These are the only two that seem standard:



AND ∧
OR ∨


I'm not sure about the other ones, if there is a preferred set of symbols, or ones that are used most often in papers and the like.










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$




There are these logic gates symbols, but I am looking for the more low-level math-like symbols such as those found here, but for all the logic operations. There doesn't seem to be a central place for them, but these seem close.



I would like to know if from your perspective those are the standard symbols, or if there are others.



AND ∧
OR ∨
XOR ⊻
XNOR ↔
NAND ↑
NOR ↓
NOT ¬


These are the only two that seem standard:



AND ∧
OR ∨


I'm not sure about the other ones, if there is a preferred set of symbols, or ones that are used most often in papers and the like.







logic notation






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share|cite|improve this question











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asked Jan 11 at 6:10









Lance PollardLance Pollard

1,358926




1,358926












  • $begingroup$
    They are all standard, and easily invoked in $LaTeX$.
    $endgroup$
    – David G. Stork
    Jan 11 at 6:19










  • $begingroup$
    The table for gates isn't entirely correct, it is quite common to make, for example, a Nor gate by putting circles on the inputs of an And gate, that is in fact the whole point of the symbolic notation.
    $endgroup$
    – DanielV
    Jan 11 at 13:07










  • $begingroup$
    Yes, these are relatively standard; you may also see $barwedge$ and $overline{vee}$ for NAND and NOR, and $oplus$ and $overline{oplus}$ for XOR and XNOR.
    $endgroup$
    – Deusovi
    Jan 11 at 17:59












  • $begingroup$
    The de facto standard for papers is to use $LaTeX$ (often together with packages like $mathtt{amssymb}$). If you use $LaTeX$, you don't need to know about Unicode. MathML defines a standard for mathematical content on the Web and includes definitions of a standard set of XML entities for mathematics and associated Unicode code points. MathJax which is used to enter and render mathematics on MSE uses MathML (and the $LaTeX$ interface supports a useful subset of the MathML entities).
    $endgroup$
    – Rob Arthan
    Jan 14 at 16:34


















  • $begingroup$
    They are all standard, and easily invoked in $LaTeX$.
    $endgroup$
    – David G. Stork
    Jan 11 at 6:19










  • $begingroup$
    The table for gates isn't entirely correct, it is quite common to make, for example, a Nor gate by putting circles on the inputs of an And gate, that is in fact the whole point of the symbolic notation.
    $endgroup$
    – DanielV
    Jan 11 at 13:07










  • $begingroup$
    Yes, these are relatively standard; you may also see $barwedge$ and $overline{vee}$ for NAND and NOR, and $oplus$ and $overline{oplus}$ for XOR and XNOR.
    $endgroup$
    – Deusovi
    Jan 11 at 17:59












  • $begingroup$
    The de facto standard for papers is to use $LaTeX$ (often together with packages like $mathtt{amssymb}$). If you use $LaTeX$, you don't need to know about Unicode. MathML defines a standard for mathematical content on the Web and includes definitions of a standard set of XML entities for mathematics and associated Unicode code points. MathJax which is used to enter and render mathematics on MSE uses MathML (and the $LaTeX$ interface supports a useful subset of the MathML entities).
    $endgroup$
    – Rob Arthan
    Jan 14 at 16:34
















$begingroup$
They are all standard, and easily invoked in $LaTeX$.
$endgroup$
– David G. Stork
Jan 11 at 6:19




$begingroup$
They are all standard, and easily invoked in $LaTeX$.
$endgroup$
– David G. Stork
Jan 11 at 6:19












$begingroup$
The table for gates isn't entirely correct, it is quite common to make, for example, a Nor gate by putting circles on the inputs of an And gate, that is in fact the whole point of the symbolic notation.
$endgroup$
– DanielV
Jan 11 at 13:07




$begingroup$
The table for gates isn't entirely correct, it is quite common to make, for example, a Nor gate by putting circles on the inputs of an And gate, that is in fact the whole point of the symbolic notation.
$endgroup$
– DanielV
Jan 11 at 13:07












$begingroup$
Yes, these are relatively standard; you may also see $barwedge$ and $overline{vee}$ for NAND and NOR, and $oplus$ and $overline{oplus}$ for XOR and XNOR.
$endgroup$
– Deusovi
Jan 11 at 17:59






$begingroup$
Yes, these are relatively standard; you may also see $barwedge$ and $overline{vee}$ for NAND and NOR, and $oplus$ and $overline{oplus}$ for XOR and XNOR.
$endgroup$
– Deusovi
Jan 11 at 17:59














$begingroup$
The de facto standard for papers is to use $LaTeX$ (often together with packages like $mathtt{amssymb}$). If you use $LaTeX$, you don't need to know about Unicode. MathML defines a standard for mathematical content on the Web and includes definitions of a standard set of XML entities for mathematics and associated Unicode code points. MathJax which is used to enter and render mathematics on MSE uses MathML (and the $LaTeX$ interface supports a useful subset of the MathML entities).
$endgroup$
– Rob Arthan
Jan 14 at 16:34




$begingroup$
The de facto standard for papers is to use $LaTeX$ (often together with packages like $mathtt{amssymb}$). If you use $LaTeX$, you don't need to know about Unicode. MathML defines a standard for mathematical content on the Web and includes definitions of a standard set of XML entities for mathematics and associated Unicode code points. MathJax which is used to enter and render mathematics on MSE uses MathML (and the $LaTeX$ interface supports a useful subset of the MathML entities).
$endgroup$
– Rob Arthan
Jan 14 at 16:34










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