Probability/Local Manual of Style
Appearance
It is encouraged to follow this manual when editing to ensure consistency. Nevertheless, be bold when editing. |
Purpose of this book
[edit | edit source]The difficulty level of this book should be similar to that of first university-level probability course. In particular, measure theory and related advanced topic should not be included in this book. Instead, they should be included in the Probability Theory wikibook (for measure-theoretic probability), or Measure Theory wikibook (for measure theory itself).
Applications of probability can be included briefly, but are not the main focus of this wikibook.
Some notations and abbreviations
[edit | edit source]Notations
[edit | edit source]In some occasions, these notations may have different meanings compared with those stated in the following. The words explaining the meaning of the following notations in the actual content take precedence.
- CAPITAL letters (possibly with subscripts): sets [1] or random variables [2];
- small letters (possibly with subscripts): variables or elements in sets;
- : the union of and ;
- : the intersection of and ;
- : the relative complement of in
- : is a subset of ;
- : is a proper subset of ;
- : the (absolute) complement of ;
- : a universal set;
- : the cardinality of ;
- : the power set of ;
- : the binomial coefficient indexed by and ;
- : a sample space;
- : an event space;
- : the probability (function);
- : and are independent;
- : a cumulative distribution function;
- : a probability mass or probability density function;
- : the support of ;
- : the binomial distribution with independent Bernoulli trials with success probability ;
- : the Bernoulli distribution with one Bernoulli trial with success probability ;
- : the Poisson distribution with rate parameter ;
- : the geometric distribution with success probability ;
- : the negative binomial distribution (number of failures before th successes) with success probability ;
- : the hypergeometric distribution with population size containing objects of type 1, objects of another type, and objects drawn;
- : the finite discrete distribution with vector and probability vector ;
- : the discrete uniform distribution;
- : the uniform distribution over the interval ;
- [3]: the exponential distribution with rate parameter ;
- : the gamma distribution with shape parameter and rate parameter ;
- : the beta distribution with shape parameters and ;
- : the Cauchy distribution with location parameter (with scale parameter 1);
- : the normal distribution with mean and variance ;
- : the chi-squared distribution with degrees of freedom;
- : the Student's distribution with degrees of freedom;
- : the -distribution with and degrees of freedom;
- : the multinomial distribution with trials and probability vector .
- : the -dimensional multivariate normal distribution with mean vector and covariance matrix ;
- (or ): the mean of ;
- (or ): the variance of ;
- : the standard deviation of ;
- : the covariance of and ;
- (or ) : the correlation coefficient of and ;
- Bold CAPITAL letters (e.g. , and possibly with subscript): random vectors;
- Bold small letters (e.g. , and possibly with subscript): vectors;
- : the transpose of ;
- : the dot product of and .
Abbreviations
[edit | edit source]- no.: number;
- r.v.: random variable;
- cdf: cumulative distribution function;
- pmf: probability mass function;
- pdf: probability density function;
- s.d.: standard deviation;
- df: degrees of freedom;
- It is usually denoted by (stands for 'nu', possibly with subscript).
- i.i.d: independent and identically distributed;
- mgf: moment generating function;
- CLT: Central Limit Theorem.
Conventions
[edit | edit source]- Use title casing for subpage (called chapter) titles, and use sentence casing for section titles.
- Use LaTeX (instead of HTML) for all math-related variables, formulas, notations etc., to ensure consistency in appearance[4].
- Use <math></math> for inline math[5];
- Use <math display=block></math> for display math (i.e. formulas on its own line);
- Use quizzes (if possible) for exercises.
- Try to use mnemonic notations (if possible). E.g., for a set, for time, etc. [6]
Templates
[edit | edit source]- Use {{nav}} as navigation template. Put two {{nav}}'s for each subpage, one at top, one at bottom, and enclose each of them by <noinclude></noinclude>, so that they do not appear at the print version.
- Use {{colored em}} for emphasis.
- Use {{colored definition}}, {{colored proposition}}, {{colored theorem}}, {{colored remark}}, {{colored proof}}, {{colored example}}, {{colored exercise}}, {{colored corollary}} and {{colored lemma}} for writing definitions, propositions, etc. ('type declarations' for paragraphs).
- Put {{BookCat}} at the bottom of each subpage.
- ↑ usually the first few letters in alphabetical order , e.g. and , or (mnemonic for set)
- ↑ usually the last few letters in alphabetical order), e.g. and
- ↑ It is not .
- ↑ For numbers, they can be just typed out.
- ↑ This makes the symbol bigger than that using <math display=inline></math>, and thus is clearer.
- ↑ However, conventional notations should take precedenece. E.g., we should use , instead of , for mean.