I call them squares. They called them arrays. What do they mean?











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So I was in C++, and we had third graders come today to play our programs. Whilst the others just drilled them with problems, my game was subtract a square. It was fun watching them discover that numbers like "9" were bad positions (I never explicitly referred to squaring, I just had them multiply the number by itself.) I decided to draw something like this on the board, to show the geometric connection:



Demonstration of square numbers



The teacher called their attention that I had drawn "arrays" on the board, and they were still used in High School. I didn't bring it up, but I was wondering what they meant by "arrays".




  • Is it an another name for square?

  • Is it a multiplication method?

  • Do they mean multidimensional arrays, as in programming? (If so, third grade has sure advanced since I was in school!)

  • Something else?


These were USA/Pennsylvania third graders, if that helps.



Note: I know various meanings of "array", but I am wondering what they could possibly mean in this context, with a third grade teacher explaining to their students.










share|cite|improve this question




















  • 1




    Can you just contact the teacher and ask?
    – Rahul
    May 28 '15 at 20:26






  • 1




    @Rahul Well maybe, but I was just wondering if there is some major piece of terminology I'm missing, or it was just a random thing.
    – PyRulez
    May 28 '15 at 20:27








  • 2




    It's unequivocally weird terminology to use with 3rd graders. At least have the decency to note that they're square arrays.
    – pjs36
    May 28 '15 at 20:33






  • 3




    This may help understand (I'm not familiar enough with the US elementary school system to comment on the use of "arrays" to explain multiplication).
    – Clement C.
    May 28 '15 at 20:42






  • 2




    why answers to this question attract so many downvotes???
    – achille hui
    May 28 '15 at 21:04















up vote
3
down vote

favorite
1












So I was in C++, and we had third graders come today to play our programs. Whilst the others just drilled them with problems, my game was subtract a square. It was fun watching them discover that numbers like "9" were bad positions (I never explicitly referred to squaring, I just had them multiply the number by itself.) I decided to draw something like this on the board, to show the geometric connection:



Demonstration of square numbers



The teacher called their attention that I had drawn "arrays" on the board, and they were still used in High School. I didn't bring it up, but I was wondering what they meant by "arrays".




  • Is it an another name for square?

  • Is it a multiplication method?

  • Do they mean multidimensional arrays, as in programming? (If so, third grade has sure advanced since I was in school!)

  • Something else?


These were USA/Pennsylvania third graders, if that helps.



Note: I know various meanings of "array", but I am wondering what they could possibly mean in this context, with a third grade teacher explaining to their students.










share|cite|improve this question




















  • 1




    Can you just contact the teacher and ask?
    – Rahul
    May 28 '15 at 20:26






  • 1




    @Rahul Well maybe, but I was just wondering if there is some major piece of terminology I'm missing, or it was just a random thing.
    – PyRulez
    May 28 '15 at 20:27








  • 2




    It's unequivocally weird terminology to use with 3rd graders. At least have the decency to note that they're square arrays.
    – pjs36
    May 28 '15 at 20:33






  • 3




    This may help understand (I'm not familiar enough with the US elementary school system to comment on the use of "arrays" to explain multiplication).
    – Clement C.
    May 28 '15 at 20:42






  • 2




    why answers to this question attract so many downvotes???
    – achille hui
    May 28 '15 at 21:04













up vote
3
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
3
down vote

favorite
1






1





So I was in C++, and we had third graders come today to play our programs. Whilst the others just drilled them with problems, my game was subtract a square. It was fun watching them discover that numbers like "9" were bad positions (I never explicitly referred to squaring, I just had them multiply the number by itself.) I decided to draw something like this on the board, to show the geometric connection:



Demonstration of square numbers



The teacher called their attention that I had drawn "arrays" on the board, and they were still used in High School. I didn't bring it up, but I was wondering what they meant by "arrays".




  • Is it an another name for square?

  • Is it a multiplication method?

  • Do they mean multidimensional arrays, as in programming? (If so, third grade has sure advanced since I was in school!)

  • Something else?


These were USA/Pennsylvania third graders, if that helps.



Note: I know various meanings of "array", but I am wondering what they could possibly mean in this context, with a third grade teacher explaining to their students.










share|cite|improve this question















So I was in C++, and we had third graders come today to play our programs. Whilst the others just drilled them with problems, my game was subtract a square. It was fun watching them discover that numbers like "9" were bad positions (I never explicitly referred to squaring, I just had them multiply the number by itself.) I decided to draw something like this on the board, to show the geometric connection:



Demonstration of square numbers



The teacher called their attention that I had drawn "arrays" on the board, and they were still used in High School. I didn't bring it up, but I was wondering what they meant by "arrays".




  • Is it an another name for square?

  • Is it a multiplication method?

  • Do they mean multidimensional arrays, as in programming? (If so, third grade has sure advanced since I was in school!)

  • Something else?


These were USA/Pennsylvania third graders, if that helps.



Note: I know various meanings of "array", but I am wondering what they could possibly mean in this context, with a third grade teacher explaining to their students.







terminology education square-numbers geometry






share|cite|improve this question















share|cite|improve this question













share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question








edited Nov 23 at 1:30

























asked May 28 '15 at 20:22









PyRulez

4,59722368




4,59722368








  • 1




    Can you just contact the teacher and ask?
    – Rahul
    May 28 '15 at 20:26






  • 1




    @Rahul Well maybe, but I was just wondering if there is some major piece of terminology I'm missing, or it was just a random thing.
    – PyRulez
    May 28 '15 at 20:27








  • 2




    It's unequivocally weird terminology to use with 3rd graders. At least have the decency to note that they're square arrays.
    – pjs36
    May 28 '15 at 20:33






  • 3




    This may help understand (I'm not familiar enough with the US elementary school system to comment on the use of "arrays" to explain multiplication).
    – Clement C.
    May 28 '15 at 20:42






  • 2




    why answers to this question attract so many downvotes???
    – achille hui
    May 28 '15 at 21:04














  • 1




    Can you just contact the teacher and ask?
    – Rahul
    May 28 '15 at 20:26






  • 1




    @Rahul Well maybe, but I was just wondering if there is some major piece of terminology I'm missing, or it was just a random thing.
    – PyRulez
    May 28 '15 at 20:27








  • 2




    It's unequivocally weird terminology to use with 3rd graders. At least have the decency to note that they're square arrays.
    – pjs36
    May 28 '15 at 20:33






  • 3




    This may help understand (I'm not familiar enough with the US elementary school system to comment on the use of "arrays" to explain multiplication).
    – Clement C.
    May 28 '15 at 20:42






  • 2




    why answers to this question attract so many downvotes???
    – achille hui
    May 28 '15 at 21:04








1




1




Can you just contact the teacher and ask?
– Rahul
May 28 '15 at 20:26




Can you just contact the teacher and ask?
– Rahul
May 28 '15 at 20:26




1




1




@Rahul Well maybe, but I was just wondering if there is some major piece of terminology I'm missing, or it was just a random thing.
– PyRulez
May 28 '15 at 20:27






@Rahul Well maybe, but I was just wondering if there is some major piece of terminology I'm missing, or it was just a random thing.
– PyRulez
May 28 '15 at 20:27






2




2




It's unequivocally weird terminology to use with 3rd graders. At least have the decency to note that they're square arrays.
– pjs36
May 28 '15 at 20:33




It's unequivocally weird terminology to use with 3rd graders. At least have the decency to note that they're square arrays.
– pjs36
May 28 '15 at 20:33




3




3




This may help understand (I'm not familiar enough with the US elementary school system to comment on the use of "arrays" to explain multiplication).
– Clement C.
May 28 '15 at 20:42




This may help understand (I'm not familiar enough with the US elementary school system to comment on the use of "arrays" to explain multiplication).
– Clement C.
May 28 '15 at 20:42




2




2




why answers to this question attract so many downvotes???
– achille hui
May 28 '15 at 21:04




why answers to this question attract so many downvotes???
– achille hui
May 28 '15 at 21:04










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
3
down vote













Even though programmers know that the term can be applied when placing data in one, two, or multiple dimensions, I believe that "array", if used in elementary school, gets used specifically to refer to a two-dimensional arrangement of things.



I certainly remember a similar experience growing up: after being exposed to the idea of arrays being two-dimensional arrangements, I was initially confused when, while learning about programming, I was introduced to the notion of arrays (initially) as one-dimensional.






share|cite|improve this answer




























    up vote
    0
    down vote













    You are correct. The photos that you posted are examples of multidimensional arrays. It makes sense as well since the definition of an array is an arrangement of objects that can be constructed in rows and columns.






    share|cite|improve this answer




























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      Programmers in particular will call them arrays as that has been the term in all the languages I have worked with. This does not bring attention to the fact that all your examples have exactly two dimensions and the dimensions are the same. Arrays can have any number of dimensions and each dimension may be a different size. As figures, I think squares is a better term.






      share|cite|improve this answer




























        up vote
        -1
        down vote













        The rectangular arrangement of the square boxes is meant by the term "array".



        The German word for this would be back translated to "field", like in grainfield.



        The geometric relation might be visible from the Japanese character for field: 田



        If you look in an English dictionary on the origin of words (etymology), you get:




        From Middle English arrayen, from Anglo-Norman arayer (compare Old
        French arayer, areer (“to put in order”)), from Medieval Latin arrēdō
        (“to put in order, arrange, array”), from Medieval Latin *rēdum
        (“preparation, order”), from Frankish *reida (“preparation, order”) or
        Gothic 𐌲𐌰𐍂𐌰𐌹𐌳𐍃 (garaids, “ready, prepared”), from
        Proto-Germanic *raidaz, *raidiz (“ready”), from Proto-Indo-European
        *reydʰ- (“to put in order, ease, make comfortable”). Cognate with Old High German gireiti (“preparation”), Old Frisian rēde (“ready”), Old
        English ġerǣde (“preparation, equipment”).




        (Source)



        The term is also used for an arrangement of antennas (antenna array).



        AN/FPS-120 at Clear AFS, Alaska



        (Source)






        share|cite|improve this answer























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          4 Answers
          4






          active

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          4 Answers
          4






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          active

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          active

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          up vote
          3
          down vote













          Even though programmers know that the term can be applied when placing data in one, two, or multiple dimensions, I believe that "array", if used in elementary school, gets used specifically to refer to a two-dimensional arrangement of things.



          I certainly remember a similar experience growing up: after being exposed to the idea of arrays being two-dimensional arrangements, I was initially confused when, while learning about programming, I was introduced to the notion of arrays (initially) as one-dimensional.






          share|cite|improve this answer

























            up vote
            3
            down vote













            Even though programmers know that the term can be applied when placing data in one, two, or multiple dimensions, I believe that "array", if used in elementary school, gets used specifically to refer to a two-dimensional arrangement of things.



            I certainly remember a similar experience growing up: after being exposed to the idea of arrays being two-dimensional arrangements, I was initially confused when, while learning about programming, I was introduced to the notion of arrays (initially) as one-dimensional.






            share|cite|improve this answer























              up vote
              3
              down vote










              up vote
              3
              down vote









              Even though programmers know that the term can be applied when placing data in one, two, or multiple dimensions, I believe that "array", if used in elementary school, gets used specifically to refer to a two-dimensional arrangement of things.



              I certainly remember a similar experience growing up: after being exposed to the idea of arrays being two-dimensional arrangements, I was initially confused when, while learning about programming, I was introduced to the notion of arrays (initially) as one-dimensional.






              share|cite|improve this answer












              Even though programmers know that the term can be applied when placing data in one, two, or multiple dimensions, I believe that "array", if used in elementary school, gets used specifically to refer to a two-dimensional arrangement of things.



              I certainly remember a similar experience growing up: after being exposed to the idea of arrays being two-dimensional arrangements, I was initially confused when, while learning about programming, I was introduced to the notion of arrays (initially) as one-dimensional.







              share|cite|improve this answer












              share|cite|improve this answer



              share|cite|improve this answer










              answered May 28 '15 at 20:49









              Ken

              3,60151728




              3,60151728






















                  up vote
                  0
                  down vote













                  You are correct. The photos that you posted are examples of multidimensional arrays. It makes sense as well since the definition of an array is an arrangement of objects that can be constructed in rows and columns.






                  share|cite|improve this answer

























                    up vote
                    0
                    down vote













                    You are correct. The photos that you posted are examples of multidimensional arrays. It makes sense as well since the definition of an array is an arrangement of objects that can be constructed in rows and columns.






                    share|cite|improve this answer























                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote









                      You are correct. The photos that you posted are examples of multidimensional arrays. It makes sense as well since the definition of an array is an arrangement of objects that can be constructed in rows and columns.






                      share|cite|improve this answer












                      You are correct. The photos that you posted are examples of multidimensional arrays. It makes sense as well since the definition of an array is an arrangement of objects that can be constructed in rows and columns.







                      share|cite|improve this answer












                      share|cite|improve this answer



                      share|cite|improve this answer










                      answered May 28 '15 at 20:28









                      jcprx

                      473




                      473






















                          up vote
                          0
                          down vote













                          Programmers in particular will call them arrays as that has been the term in all the languages I have worked with. This does not bring attention to the fact that all your examples have exactly two dimensions and the dimensions are the same. Arrays can have any number of dimensions and each dimension may be a different size. As figures, I think squares is a better term.






                          share|cite|improve this answer

























                            up vote
                            0
                            down vote













                            Programmers in particular will call them arrays as that has been the term in all the languages I have worked with. This does not bring attention to the fact that all your examples have exactly two dimensions and the dimensions are the same. Arrays can have any number of dimensions and each dimension may be a different size. As figures, I think squares is a better term.






                            share|cite|improve this answer























                              up vote
                              0
                              down vote










                              up vote
                              0
                              down vote









                              Programmers in particular will call them arrays as that has been the term in all the languages I have worked with. This does not bring attention to the fact that all your examples have exactly two dimensions and the dimensions are the same. Arrays can have any number of dimensions and each dimension may be a different size. As figures, I think squares is a better term.






                              share|cite|improve this answer












                              Programmers in particular will call them arrays as that has been the term in all the languages I have worked with. This does not bring attention to the fact that all your examples have exactly two dimensions and the dimensions are the same. Arrays can have any number of dimensions and each dimension may be a different size. As figures, I think squares is a better term.







                              share|cite|improve this answer












                              share|cite|improve this answer



                              share|cite|improve this answer










                              answered May 28 '15 at 20:33









                              Ross Millikan

                              288k23195365




                              288k23195365






















                                  up vote
                                  -1
                                  down vote













                                  The rectangular arrangement of the square boxes is meant by the term "array".



                                  The German word for this would be back translated to "field", like in grainfield.



                                  The geometric relation might be visible from the Japanese character for field: 田



                                  If you look in an English dictionary on the origin of words (etymology), you get:




                                  From Middle English arrayen, from Anglo-Norman arayer (compare Old
                                  French arayer, areer (“to put in order”)), from Medieval Latin arrēdō
                                  (“to put in order, arrange, array”), from Medieval Latin *rēdum
                                  (“preparation, order”), from Frankish *reida (“preparation, order”) or
                                  Gothic 𐌲𐌰𐍂𐌰𐌹𐌳𐍃 (garaids, “ready, prepared”), from
                                  Proto-Germanic *raidaz, *raidiz (“ready”), from Proto-Indo-European
                                  *reydʰ- (“to put in order, ease, make comfortable”). Cognate with Old High German gireiti (“preparation”), Old Frisian rēde (“ready”), Old
                                  English ġerǣde (“preparation, equipment”).




                                  (Source)



                                  The term is also used for an arrangement of antennas (antenna array).



                                  AN/FPS-120 at Clear AFS, Alaska



                                  (Source)






                                  share|cite|improve this answer



























                                    up vote
                                    -1
                                    down vote













                                    The rectangular arrangement of the square boxes is meant by the term "array".



                                    The German word for this would be back translated to "field", like in grainfield.



                                    The geometric relation might be visible from the Japanese character for field: 田



                                    If you look in an English dictionary on the origin of words (etymology), you get:




                                    From Middle English arrayen, from Anglo-Norman arayer (compare Old
                                    French arayer, areer (“to put in order”)), from Medieval Latin arrēdō
                                    (“to put in order, arrange, array”), from Medieval Latin *rēdum
                                    (“preparation, order”), from Frankish *reida (“preparation, order”) or
                                    Gothic 𐌲𐌰𐍂𐌰𐌹𐌳𐍃 (garaids, “ready, prepared”), from
                                    Proto-Germanic *raidaz, *raidiz (“ready”), from Proto-Indo-European
                                    *reydʰ- (“to put in order, ease, make comfortable”). Cognate with Old High German gireiti (“preparation”), Old Frisian rēde (“ready”), Old
                                    English ġerǣde (“preparation, equipment”).




                                    (Source)



                                    The term is also used for an arrangement of antennas (antenna array).



                                    AN/FPS-120 at Clear AFS, Alaska



                                    (Source)






                                    share|cite|improve this answer

























                                      up vote
                                      -1
                                      down vote










                                      up vote
                                      -1
                                      down vote









                                      The rectangular arrangement of the square boxes is meant by the term "array".



                                      The German word for this would be back translated to "field", like in grainfield.



                                      The geometric relation might be visible from the Japanese character for field: 田



                                      If you look in an English dictionary on the origin of words (etymology), you get:




                                      From Middle English arrayen, from Anglo-Norman arayer (compare Old
                                      French arayer, areer (“to put in order”)), from Medieval Latin arrēdō
                                      (“to put in order, arrange, array”), from Medieval Latin *rēdum
                                      (“preparation, order”), from Frankish *reida (“preparation, order”) or
                                      Gothic 𐌲𐌰𐍂𐌰𐌹𐌳𐍃 (garaids, “ready, prepared”), from
                                      Proto-Germanic *raidaz, *raidiz (“ready”), from Proto-Indo-European
                                      *reydʰ- (“to put in order, ease, make comfortable”). Cognate with Old High German gireiti (“preparation”), Old Frisian rēde (“ready”), Old
                                      English ġerǣde (“preparation, equipment”).




                                      (Source)



                                      The term is also used for an arrangement of antennas (antenna array).



                                      AN/FPS-120 at Clear AFS, Alaska



                                      (Source)






                                      share|cite|improve this answer














                                      The rectangular arrangement of the square boxes is meant by the term "array".



                                      The German word for this would be back translated to "field", like in grainfield.



                                      The geometric relation might be visible from the Japanese character for field: 田



                                      If you look in an English dictionary on the origin of words (etymology), you get:




                                      From Middle English arrayen, from Anglo-Norman arayer (compare Old
                                      French arayer, areer (“to put in order”)), from Medieval Latin arrēdō
                                      (“to put in order, arrange, array”), from Medieval Latin *rēdum
                                      (“preparation, order”), from Frankish *reida (“preparation, order”) or
                                      Gothic 𐌲𐌰𐍂𐌰𐌹𐌳𐍃 (garaids, “ready, prepared”), from
                                      Proto-Germanic *raidaz, *raidiz (“ready”), from Proto-Indo-European
                                      *reydʰ- (“to put in order, ease, make comfortable”). Cognate with Old High German gireiti (“preparation”), Old Frisian rēde (“ready”), Old
                                      English ġerǣde (“preparation, equipment”).




                                      (Source)



                                      The term is also used for an arrangement of antennas (antenna array).



                                      AN/FPS-120 at Clear AFS, Alaska



                                      (Source)







                                      share|cite|improve this answer














                                      share|cite|improve this answer



                                      share|cite|improve this answer








                                      edited May 28 '15 at 20:51

























                                      answered May 28 '15 at 20:32









                                      mvw

                                      31.2k22252




                                      31.2k22252






























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