Where did the bracket notation for vectors come from and is using parentheses to represent vectors valid?

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In class I learned that a vector can be represented using <>, a column vector, and unit vector notation. However, one of the old math books that I study from notes that a vector in unit vector form can be represented with parantheses:

"Let $n$ be a positive integer. An ordered n-tuple of real numbers $$(a_1,a_2,...,a_n)$$ is called a vector in n-space. The set of all such vectors, $a_i$ real, under operations to be explained, is called Euclidean n-space, $E^n$."

This book is Calculus And Analytic Geometry Fourth Edition (1968) by George B. Thomas, Jr.

Is this parentheses notation still used? If so, is it uncommon?

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This is the standard notation in quantum mechanics. It's great, because it allows to incorporate operators as well.

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Bra–ket notation was effectively established in 1939 by Paul Dirac1[2] and is thus also known as the Dirac notation.