Formula
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- For other senses of this word, see formula (disambiguation).
In mathematics and in the sciences, a formula (plural: formulae, formulæ or formulas) is a concise way of expressing information symbolically (as in a mathematical or chemical formula), or a general relationship between quantities. One of many famous formulae is Albert Einstein's E=mc² (see special relativity).
Contents |
[edit] Formulae in mathematics
In mathematics, formulae form a crucial end result of many calculations. For example the problem of determining the volume of a sphere is one that requires a significant amount of integral calculus to solve. However, having done this once, mathematicians can produce a formula to describe the volume in terms of some other parameter (the radius for example). This particular formula is:
- <math>V = \begin{matrix} \frac{4}{3} \end{matrix} \pi r^3</math> (the <math>\pi</math> in this formula is the quantity pi).
Having determined this result, and having a sphere of which we know the radius we can quickly and easily determine the volume. Note that the quantities <math>V</math>, the volume, and <math>r</math> the radius are expressed as single letters. This convention, while less important in a relatively simple formula, means that mathematicians can more quickly manipulate larger and more complex formulae.
In general mathematical use there is no essential difference in meaning with the term "expression", although the word "formula" tends to be reserved for an expression that "can stand on its own", that has a meaning outside of the immediate context in which it appears and a significance that can be grasped intuitively.
The majority of all mathematical study revolves around formulae in many different forms from quadratic equations to the equations of motion (mainly used in mechanical mathematics and physics). In a general context, formulae are applied to provide a mathematical problem for real world problems. Some may be general formulae designed to explain a phenomena experienced everywhere - an example is force = mass × acceleration. It is a formula which applies anywhere in the universe. Other formulae may be specially created to solve a particular problem - for example using the equation of a sine curve to model the movement of the tides in a bay. In all cases however, formulae form the basis for all calculations.
[edit] Formulae in computing
In computing, a formula typically describes a calculation, such as addition, to be performed on two or more variables. A formula is often implicitly provided in the form of a computer instruction such as
Total fruit = number of Apples + number of Oranges.
In computer spreadsheet terminology, a formula is usually a text string of the form
A = A1 + A2
where both A1 and A2 describe "cells" (column A, row 1 or 2) within the spreadsheet. The result appears within the cell containing the formula itself (possibly A3, at end of values in column A).
[edit] Formula in manufacturing
In manufacturing, a bill of material is sometimes referred to as a formula.
[edit] See also
de:Formel (Mathematik)da:Matematisk formel eo:Formulo hu:Képlet it:Formula ja:公式 pt:Fórmula ru:Математическая формула simple:Formula su:Rumus sv:Formel zh:数学公式

