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  2. Antichain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antichain

    An antichain in the inclusion ordering of subsets of an -element set is known as a Sperner family. The number of different Sperner families is counted by the Dedekind numbers, [3] the first few of which numbers are 2, 3, 6, 20, 168, 7581, 7828354, 2414682040998, 56130437228687557907788 (sequence A000372 in the OEIS).

  3. Sperner's theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sperner's_theorem

    The family of all subsets of an n-element set (its power set) can be partially ordered by set inclusion; in this partial order, two distinct elements are said to be incomparable when neither of them contains the other. The width of a partial order is the largest number of elements in an antichain, a set of pairwise incomparable elements ...

  4. Comparability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparability

    Hasse diagram of the natural numbers, partially ordered by "x≤y if x divides y".The numbers 4 and 6 are incomparable, since neither divides the other. In mathematics, two elements x and y of a set P are said to be comparable with respect to a binary relation ≤ if at least one of x ≤ y or y ≤ x is true.

  5. Dilworth's theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dilworth's_theorem

    In mathematics, in the areas of order theory and combinatorics, Dilworth's theorem states that, in any finite partially ordered set, the maximum size of an antichain of incomparable elements equals the minimum number of chains needed to cover all elements. This number is called the width of the partial order.

  6. Partially ordered set - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partially_ordered_set

    If the number 1 is excluded, while keeping divisibility as ordering on the elements greater than 1, then the resulting poset does not have a least element, but any prime number is a minimal element for it. In this poset, 60 is an upper bound (though not a least upper bound) of the subset {,,,}, which does not have any lower bound (since 1 is ...

  7. Greatest element and least element - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greatest_element_and_least...

    In mathematics, especially in order theory, the greatest element of a subset of a partially ordered set (poset) is an element of that is greater than every other element of . The term least element is defined dually , that is, it is an element of S {\displaystyle S} that is smaller than every other element of S . {\displaystyle S.}

  8. Maximal and minimal elements - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximal_and_minimal_elements

    In a directed set, every pair of elements (particularly pairs of incomparable elements) has a common upper bound within the set. If a directed set has a maximal element, it is also its greatest element, [proof 7] and hence its only maximal element. For a directed set without maximal or greatest elements, see examples 1 and 2 above.

  9. Dedekind–MacNeille completion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dedekind–MacNeille...

    An element x of S embeds into the completion as its principal ideal, the set ↓ x of elements less than or equal to x. Then (↓ x) u is the set of elements greater than or equal to x, and ((↓ x) u) l = ↓ x, showing that ↓ x is indeed a member of the completion. The mapping from x to ↓ x is an order-embedding. [7]