Repeating inequalities

RedSanders

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Assignment calls for me to show examples of "repeating inequalities". Example teacher gave is -1≤1<2
I don't understand what a repeating inequality is, nor why the example is one. Please help.
 
Assignment calls for me to show examples of "repeating inequalities". Example teacher gave is -1≤1<2
I don't understand what a repeating inequality is, nor why the example is one. Please help.

I for one do not understand the example. The statement:

-11<2

is FALSE. (-1 is a discrete number - it cannot equal another unique discrete number)
 
-11<2
is FALSE. (-1 is a discrete number - it cannot equal another unique discrete number)
Sorry, but that is not false.
One is greater than minus one OR one is equal to minus one, \(\displaystyle -1\le 1\), is a true statement.

\(\displaystyle T \vee F \equiv F \vee T \equiv T \vee T \equiv T\)
 
Sorry, but that is not false.
One is greater than minus one OR one is equal to minus one, \(\displaystyle -1\le 1\), is a true statement.

\(\displaystyle T \vee F \equiv F \vee T \equiv T \vee T \equiv T\)

Ooops ... I forgot there was an implied OR there....
 
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Assignment calls for me to show examples of "repeating inequalities". Example teacher gave is -1≤1<2
I don't understand what a repeating inequality is, nor why the example is one. Please help.
Well that is a "repeating inequality" (I really have not seen that before) because it has two inequality signs- the inequality sign is repeated. What it means is two inequalities: \(\displaystyle -1\le 1\) and \(\displaystyle 1< 2\). Be careful about the direction of the inequalies. Both -1< 2 and 1> -1 are true but you cannot write 1> -1< 2 because that we want to be able to "pass through" the inequalities- and 1 is NOT greater than 2.
 
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