Boolean algebra, developed in 1854 by George Boole in his book An Investigation of the Laws of Thought, is a variant of ordinary algebra as taught in high school. Boolean algebra differs from ordinary algebra in three ways: in the values that variables may assume, which are of a logical instead of a numeric character, prototypically 0 and 1; in the operations applicable to those values; and in the properties of those operations, that is, the laws they obey.
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- Boolean algebra, developed in 1854 by George Boole in his book An Investigation of the Laws of Thought, is a variant of ordinary algebra as taught in high school. Boolean algebra differs from ordinary algebra in three ways: in the values that variables may assume, which are of a logical instead of a numeric character, prototypically 0 and 1; in the operations applicable to those values; and in the properties of those operations, that is, the laws they obey.
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- Boolean algebra, developed in 1854 by George Boole in his book An Investigation of the Laws of Thought, is a variant of ordinary algebra as taught in high school. Boolean algebra differs from ordinary algebra in three ways: in the values that variables may assume, which are of a logical instead of a numeric character, prototypically 0 and 1; in the operations applicable to those values; and in the properties of those operations, that is, the laws they obey.
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- Introduction to boolean algebra
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