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Old March 12th 04, 08:52 PM
Tim Wescott
 
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"Bob Stephens" wrote in message
.. .
On Fri, 12 Mar 2004 17:25:59 +0000 (UTC), Mike Andrews wrote:

In

(rec.radio.amateur.homebrew), Ben Bradley wrote:
In rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,sci.electronics.design, Bob Stephens
wrote:


On Fri, 12 Mar 2004 16:08:15 +0000, John Woodgate wrote:

where sinc(x)= {sin(x)}/x

I've never seen this terminology before. Is this standard math parlance

or
is it something of your own?


You can google for it (Usenet or Web) and find it, I've seen it
used a good bit in signal processing and such.


And it shows up in some math classes as well, though its main use is
in electronics. I suspect it showed up because the instructor wanted
to show a real-life example, which just happened to be -- electronics.


I've always seen it as 1/x sin(x) "one over ex sine ex". the hyperbolic
sine function sinh is usually pronounced "Cinch"
So how do you pronounce sinc? "Sink ?"


Yes, it's pronounced "sink", and it's quite common in signal processing.
You define it as being the _limit_ of sin(x)/x as x - 0 because otherwise
it's undefined at zero, and all the mathematicians in the crowd will curse
at you for being yet another engineer who's treating math so casually.