In Wikipedia's article on Sample there is the following remark:
''Note that a sample of random variables (i.e. a set of measurable functions) must not be confused with the realizations of these variables (which are the values that these random variables take). In other words, $X_i$ is a function representing the measurement at the $i$-th experiment and $x_i = X_i(ω)$ is the value we actually get when making the measurement.''
I'm afraid I don't understand this passage, can anybody please explain the point?
WP's formulation is at best ambiguous, in particular the second sentence quoted by the OP seems to hint at a distinction related to the precision of a measurement or to an approximation, or to intervals vs exact values. Nothing of the sort is pertinent. Rather, one wishes to distinguish a function from one of its values. For functions from $E$ to $F$, say, the first one is an element of $F^E$ and the second one is an element of $F$ (and in probability theory, $E$ is often denoted by $\Omega$ and $F$ could be $\mathbb{R}$ or a power of $\mathbb{R}$, but this is not important).