Good point, now that you mention it I do remember that notation from high school books. However I think that is still the non-rigorous way of defining the integral. It may be standard practice for HSC problems, I am not sure.
To see more about what I was talking about look at page 3 of
https://www.math.ucdavis.edu/~hunter/m125b/ch1.pdf you can see the upper and lower Riemann sums used. If we just say it's the sum is the integral we are missing the step of proving that. What usually happens in the proofs is to be able to evaluate the sums and show they are the same, but what happened here was to say the sum is the integral to evaluate the sum.