See https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/15455/backwards-epsilon/15460#15460 On 03-Dec-17 16:11, Dan Asimov wrote:
When scribbling a math question to myself on a pad of paper, I'll often use notation like
∃? x in X ∋— [condition]
[* In case it's illegible in your mail reader:
i) the first symbol is a backwards capital E, a "there exists" symbol]
ii) the symbol ∋— after the X looks like a pitchfork with the handle to the right. This means "such that".
to mean
"Does there exist a member of the set X such that [condition] holds?"
where the such-that symbol ∋— is something I picked up somewhere from my professors, but haven't seen many other people using it. (To simulate it here I've used the "contains as a member" backwards epsilon special character followed by an em-dash (option-shift-plus on a Mac keyboard).)
—Dan
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