value that can change, usually with a context of an equation or operation
A variable is a symbol or placeholder (like the letter x) that represents a value that can change or be unknown. Variables are useful in equations and operations because they let you work with changing quantities and solve problems without knowing all the specific numbers upfront.
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In mathematics, a variable (from Latin variabilis 'changeable') is a symbol, typically a letter, that refers to an unspecified mathematical object. One says colloquially that the variable represents or denotes the object, and that any valid candidate for the object is the value of the variable. The values a variable can take are usually of the same kind, often numbers. More specifically, the values involved may form a set, such as the set of real numbers.
The object may not always exist, or it might be uncertain whether any valid candidate exists or not. For example, one could represent two integers by the variables p and q and require that the value of the square of p is twice the square of q, which in algebraic notation can be written p = 2 q. A definitive proof that this relationship is impossible to satisfy when p and q are restricted to nonzero integers isn't obvious, but it has been known since ancient times and has had a big influence on mathematics ever since.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).