ENGINEERING INTELLIGENCE AND INNOVATION

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Mathematical Notation

A clear and consistent notation system improves reviewability and reproducibility. Follow the conventions below, especially italics for variables, roman units, and consistent equation numbering.

General principles

  • Define symbols at first use and keep notation consistent throughout (case, subscripts, boldness).
  • Avoid reusing the same symbol for different meanings; if unavoidable, clarify explicitly.
  • Consider adding a Notation subsection listing key variables and units.

Typography conventions

  • Use italics for variables/symbols; use roman type for units, function names, and operators.
  • Use bold symbols for vectors/matrices; keep scalars non-bold.
  • Use roman subscripts for descriptors (e.g., max, in, out) and italic subscripts for variables.

Equations: editing, numbering, and referencing

  • Create equations with an equation editor; avoid images or manual character hacks.
  • Number equations consecutively with right-aligned numbers in parentheses, e.g., (1).
  • Refer to equations as “(1)” (not “Eq. (1)”) except at sentence start where “Equation (1)” is acceptable.
  • Punctuate equations when they are part of a sentence.
  • Define all symbols before the equation appears or immediately after it.

Units, dimensions, and numerical style

  • Provide units for physical quantities and prefer SI units; place a space between number and unit (e.g., 30 km/h).
  • Avoid mixing unit systems; if non-SI is used, provide conversions or clear notes.
  • Write decimals as 0.25 (not .25) and state significant digits/uncertainty when relevant.

Algorithms & pseudocode

  • Number algorithms and provide short titles; format them distinctly from body text.
  • Use consistent notation; specify inputs/outputs and hyperparameters.

Clarity tips

  • Use parentheses, solidus (/), or exp() to avoid ambiguous denominators/exponents.
  • Avoid long, subscript-heavy formulas in titles; keep them short if unavoidable.
  • When notation is dense, add a symbol/parameter table in the paper or appendix.