Almost always
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Revision as of 21:44, 19 March 2016 by Boris (Talk | contribs) (→Examples: assuming that ''f'' runs over natural numbers)
Contents
Meaning
'Almost always or Almost everywhere or Almost all are phrases that mean all but a finite number[1]
TODO: But in measure theory and probability it means all but a set of measure zero
Examples
- [ilmath]f<10[/ilmath] almost everywhere
- The set [ilmath]\{x\vert f(x)\ge 10\} [/ilmath] is finite (assuming that f runs over natural numbers, of course)
Note
The template {{a.e}} which looks like "a.e" can be used where needed and will link here (it is actually a link, but on this page it doesn't show as one because it links to this very page!)
References
- ↑ Algebra - Serge Lang - Revised Third Edition - GTM