The plusâÂÂminus sign or plus-or-minus sign () and the complementary minus-or-plus sign () are symbols with broadly similar multiple meanings.
Other meanings occur in other fields, including medicine, engineering, chemistry, electronics, linguistics, and philosophy.
A version of the sign, including also the French word ou ("or"), was used in its mathematical meaning by Albert Girard in 1626, and the sign in its modern form was used as early as 1631, in William Oughtred's Clavis Mathematicae.
In mathematical formulas, the symbol may be used to indicate a symbol that may be replaced by either of the plus and minus signs, or , allowing the formula to represent two values or two equations.
If , one may give the solution as . This indicates that the equation has two solutions: and . A common use of this notation is found in the quadratic formula
which describes the two conjugate solutions to the quadratic equation
A related usage is found in this presentation of the formula for the Taylor series of the sine function:
Here, the plus-or-minus sign indicates that the term may be added or subtracted depending on whether is odd or even; a rule which can be deduced from the first few terms. A more rigorous presentation would multiply each term by a factor of , which gives +1 when is even, and âÂÂ1 when is odd. In older texts one occasionally finds , which means the same.
The minusâÂÂplus sign, , is generally used in conjunction with the sign, and always has the opposite sign to . For example, , is a shorthand for or (but nor ).
The above expression could be rewritten as to avoid use of , but cases such as this trigonometric identity are most neatly written using the "âÂÂ" sign:
which represents the two equations:
Another example is the sum and difference of cubes
which represents the two equations:
When both and signs appear in an equation, it is unambiguous that all such signs are correlated; the shorthand describes exactly two equations. When only signs appear, the standard mathematical convention is that they all take on the same value, so for example the trigonometric identity
is also a shorthand for two equations: one with on both sides of the equation, and one with on both sides.
However, this may be modified by the surrounding text, which may state "where the âÂÂñâ signs are independent" or similar. If such a simple description is not possible, the equation must be re-written to provide clarity; e.g. by introducing variables such as , , ... and specifying the appropriate relation, such as .
The use of for an approximation is most commonly encountered in presenting the numerical value of a quantity, together with its tolerance or its statistical margin of error. For example, may be anywhere in the range from 5.5 to 5.9 inclusive. In scientific usage, it sometimes refers to a probability of being within the stated interval, usually corresponding to either 1 or 2 standard deviations (a probability of 68.3% or 95.4% in a normal distribution).
Operations involving uncertain values should always try to preserve the uncertainty, in order to avoid propagation of error. If , any operation of the form must return a value of the form , where is and is the range updated using interval arithmetic.
The symbols and are used in chess annotation to denote a moderate but significant advantage for White and Black, respectively. Weaker and stronger advantages are denoted by and for only a slight advantage, and and for a strong, potentially winning advantage, again for White and Black respectively.
The plusâÂÂminus sign resembles the Chinese characters (Radical 32) and (Radical 33), whereas the minusâÂÂplus sign resembles (Radical 51).