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What Is Propositional Logic?

Answer»

A proposition is a collection of declarative STATEMENTS that has either a truth value "true” or a truth value "false". A propositional consists of propositional variables and connectives. We denote the propositional variables by CAPITAL letters (A, B, ETC). The connectives connect the propositional variables.

Some examples of Propositions are given below −

  • "Man is MORTAL", it returns truth value “TRUE”
  • "12 + 9 = 3 – 2", it returns truth value “FALSE”

A proposition is a collection of declarative statements that has either a truth value "true” or a truth value "false". A propositional consists of propositional variables and connectives. We denote the propositional variables by capital letters (A, B, etc). The connectives connect the propositional variables.

Some examples of Propositions are given below −



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