In mathematical notation, ordered set operators indicate whether an object precedes or succeeds another. These relationship operators are denoted by the unicode symbols U+227A-F, along with symbols located unicode blocks U+228x through U+22Ex.
Mathematical Operators
[1] Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF) | ||||||||||||||||
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | A | B | C | D | E | F | |
U+227x | ≰ | ≱ | ≲ | ≳ | ≴ | ≵ | ≶ | ≷ | ≸ | ≹ | ≺ | ≻ | ≼ | ≽ | ≾ | ≿ |
U+228x | ⊀ | ⊠| ⊂ | ⊃ | ⊄ | ⊅ | ⊆ | ⊇ | ⊈ | ⊉ | ⊊ | ⊋ | ⊌ | ⊠| ⊎ | ⊠|
U+22Bx | ⊰ | ⊱ | ⊲ | ⊳ | ⊴ | ⊵ | ⊶ | ⊷ | ⊸ | ⊹ | ⊺ | ⊻ | ⊼ | ⊽ | ⊾ | ⊿ |
U+22Dx | ⋠| ⋑ | ⋒ | ⋓ | ⋔ | ⋕ | ⋖ | ⋗ | ⋘ | ⋙ | ⋚ | ⋛ | ⋜ | ⋠| ⋞ | ⋟ |
U+22Ex | ⋠| ⋡ | ⋢ | ⋣ | ⋤ | ⋥ | ⋦ | ⋧ | ⋨ | ⋩ | ⋪ | ⋫ | ⋬ | ⋠| ⋮ | ⋯ |
Notes
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In Political science and Decision theory, order relations are typically used in the context of an agent's choice, for example the preferences of a voter over several political candidates.