![]() The result is interesting: a grammatical melange of definitions, phonetics, word frequency in the English language, narrower search terms and broader search terms, how to hyphenate this word, rhyming words and a graphic of a synonym network related to the word. I entered the search term "stock market" and WolframAlpha wanted to query on specific stocks, so I decided to use the term "market". I decided I should explore this "fuzzy" logic some more. If you choose to search "NYSE" as a word it returns a slightly different result - still the New York Stock Exchange, its website address and definition, but also synonyms related to it. Here are just a few cool, weird, fun, and even occasionally practical things you can do with Wolfram that have nothing to do with solving for X. ![]() So it appears that WolframAlpha is doing well in the world of quantifiable, but what about economic and financial terms like "NYSE"? WolframAlpha assumes you want a financial term as the querying result, returning a host of information from current stock charts, a scatter plot, financial indicators, and comparisons to other markets and histograms about NYSE. ![]()
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