Discrete Mathematics question Let p and q be the propositions: p : I bought a lottery ticket this week. q : I won the million dollar j ackpot on Friday
\[\Large \neg p \implies \text{I did not buy a lottery ticket this week}\] yes?
am i right??
is that not p or p' yes,u are right.
p'?
not p or complement of p
what about p ^ q? how do i state that? I bought a lottery ticket this week and i won the 1 million dollar jackpot on Friday ???
yup.
uhh what about \(\neg \) p ^ \(\neg\) q ??
i did not buy a lottery ticket today and I did not win the 1 million dollar jackpot on Friday?
did not buy and did not win yup.
what about p V q? what does that mean
is that the complement
bought a lottery OR won the million
....what does V mean.....
....
you're redirecting me to wikipedia.......
because there is explanation to ALL the symbols u'll need.
1) wikipedia overcomplicates math topics 2) i'm here for an explanation 3) reading materials are not good teachers
V means OR so A V B is equivalent to A or B.
then \(\leftrightarrow\) means "if and only if"?
\[p \leftrightarrow q \implies \text{I bought a lottery ticket this week if and only if I won the million} \\ \text{dollar jackpot on Firday}\] ???
yup.
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