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  2. Transitive relation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transitive_relation

    The transitive extension of R 1 would be denoted by R 2, and continuing in this way, in general, the transitive extension of R i would be R i + 1. The transitive closure of R, denoted by R* or R ∞ is the set union of R, R 1, R 2, ... . [8] The transitive closure of a relation is a transitive relation. [8]

  3. List of set identities and relations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_set_identities_and...

    Throughout this article, capital letters (such as ,,,,, and ) will denote sets.On the left hand side of an identity, typically, will be the leftmost set, will be the middle set, and

  4. Converse relation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Converse_relation

    In the monoid of binary endorelations on a set (with the binary operation on relations being the composition of relations), the converse relation does not satisfy the definition of an inverse from group theory, that is, if is an arbitrary relation on , then does not equal the identity relation on in general.

  5. Relation algebra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relation_algebra

    A relation algebra (L, ∧, ∨, −, 0, 1, •, I, ˘) is an algebraic structure equipped with the Boolean operations of conjunction x∧y, disjunction x∨y, and negation x −, the Boolean constants 0 and 1, the relational operations of composition x•y and converse x˘, and the relational constant I, such that these operations and constants satisfy certain equations constituting an ...

  6. Law of trichotomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_trichotomy

    A law of trichotomy on some set X of numbers usually expresses that some tacitly given ordering relation on X is a trichotomous one. An example is the law "For arbitrary real numbers x and y, exactly one of x < y, y < x, or x = y applies"; some authors even fix y to be zero, [1] relying on the real number's additive linearly ordered group structure.

  7. Equivalence relation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equivalence_relation

    For example, the natural numbers 2 and 6 have a common factor greater than 1, and 6 and 3 have a common factor greater than 1, but 2 and 3 do not have a common factor greater than 1. The empty relation R (defined so that aRb is never true) on a set X is vacuously symmetric and transitive; however, it is not reflexive (unless X itself is empty).

  8. Will There Be a “Smile 3”? Here's What the Director of the ...

    www.aol.com/smile-3-heres-director-hit-230000043...

    More of the Smile franchise's lore is revealed and expanded in the bonkers second film, which briefly carries over star Kyle Gallner's character from the first film to propel the story further.

  9. Preorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preorder

    Define as "<" (that is, take the inverse complement of the relation), which corresponds to defining as "neither < <"; these relations and are in general not transitive; however, if they are then is an equivalence; in that case "<" is a strict weak order.