What is the name of the symbol $=$ in English? Wikipedia says people use "equals sign" than "equality". Is it right? Is it to avoid ambiguity between the equality formula $(x = y)$ and the equality symbol $=$?
The main my question is the following: can I call the symbol $=$ equality when it is obvious from the context?
I'm writing a text like:
The language of set theory uses the following symbols:
- truth: $\top$
- falsity: $\bot$
- negation: $\neg$
- conjunction: $\land$
- disjunction: $\lor$
- implication: $\Rightarrow$
- biconditional: $\Leftrightarrow$
- universal quantifier: $\forall$
- existential quantifier: $\exists$
- equality: $=$
- membership: $\in$
Does this sound strange? I'm not sure because I have seen some mathematicians use the word "equality" for the symbol but perhaps they are not native English speakers.
Reply to some comments:
To @xander-henderson: For example, there are many famous propositions like Cauchy-Schwarz inequality. It is a proposition or a well-formed formula, not a symbol itself.
To @jmoravitz: In Japanese, the proposition $x = y$ is only called "等式" or "方程式", and the symbol $=$ is only called "等号". The proposition $x \le y$ is called "不等式" and the symbol $\le$ is called "不等号". So I don't have any idea whether it is okay or not. Calling both "inequality" is like calling both "不等". So I'm afraid "equals sign" feels like too colloquial, but I'm not a native English speaker, it's unreliable. I have seen at least Japanese and Ukrainian mathematician uses "equality" as a symbol in some obvious contexts. But Wikipedia says "equals sign" is popular. So I asked.
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in the context of its existence as a character as "equality" rather than "the equals symbol" or "the equals sign" but it really shouldn't matter in the long run. – JMoravitz Jun 08 '22 at 16:51=
is "equals sign". But they also call the backslash "reverse solidus", which nobody in real life does. – Dan Jul 18 '22 at 16:35