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bracketing

Bracketing is a term used in several disciplines to describe the use of brackets or a methodological practice of isolating a variable or range by intentionally setting boundaries. It can refer to both symbolic notation and practical techniques.

In photography and visual imaging, exposure bracketing involves taking a sequence of shots at different exposure

In linguistics and grammar, bracketing refers to the use of bracket notation to represent the hierarchical

In philosophy, bracketing, or epoché, is the method of suspending judgment about the existence or nature of

In mathematics and related fields, brackets denote grouping and denote intervals in set theory and analysis.

In computing and programming, brackets determine array indices, list literals, or code blocks, with conventions varying

In editing, square brackets are used to insert clarifications or editorial notes within quotations, while parentheses

levels
around
a
metered
exposure,
to
ensure
one
image
is
correctly
exposed
or
to
create
high
dynamic
range
(HDR)
imagery.
The
approach
is
often
automated
in
cameras,
using
predefined
stop
differences
between
shots.
structure
of
a
sentence
or
phrase,
showing
how
units
such
as
words
and
phrases
group
together.
This
helps
analysts
visualize
constituents
and
syntactic
relationships,
for
example
in
tree-like
representations
or
nested
structures.
the
external
world
to
analyze
the
conditions
of
experience.
Associated
with
phenomenology,
it
aims
to
examine
consciousness
without
presuppositions
about
reality.
Parentheses
group
terms
for
order
of
operations;
square
brackets
and
braces
serve
in
matrices,
floor/ceiling
functions,
or
nested
expressions.
Interval
notation
uses
brackets
or
parentheses
to
indicate
inclusion
or
exclusion
of
endpoints.
by
language.
Parentheses
often
enclose
function
arguments,
square
brackets
for
indexing
or
arrays,
and
curly
braces
for
blocks
or
scopes.
provide
supplementary
information.