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In computer science, a set is an abstract data type that can store unique values, without any particular order. It is a computer implementation of the mathematical concept of a finite set. Unlike most other collection types, rather than retrieving a specific element from a set, one typically tests a value for membership in a set.
Often is a set between 's support and its interior; for instance, if is the uniform distribution on the interval (,], might be (,]. If A {\displaystyle A} is not specified, it is assumed to be some set contained in the support of P {\displaystyle P} and containing its interior, depending on context.
In theoretical computer science and cryptography, a pseudorandom generator (PRG) for a class of statistical tests is a deterministic procedure that maps a random seed to a longer pseudorandom string such that no statistical test in the class can distinguish between the output of the generator and the uniform distribution.
A random seed (or seed state, or just seed) is a number (or vector) used to initialize a pseudorandom number generator. A pseudorandom number generator's number sequence is completely determined by the seed: thus, if a pseudorandom number generator is later reinitialized with the same seed, it will produce the same sequence of numbers.
SETL (SET Language) is a very high-level programming language [1] based on the mathematical theory of sets. [2] [3] It was originally developed at the New York University (NYU) Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences in the late 1960s, by a group containing (Jack) Jacob T. Schwartz, [1] [3] R.B.K. Dewar, and E. Schonberg. [1]
Each step, x n−r ·(ab r −1) is added to this integer. This is done in two parts: −1·x n−r is added to x n−r, resulting in a least significant word of zero. And second, a·x n−r is added to the carry. This makes the integer one word longer, producing two new most significant words x n and c n.
Set theoretic programming is a programming paradigm based on mathematical set theory. One example of a programming language based on this paradigm is SETL . The goal of set theoretic programming is to improve programmer speed and productivity significantly, and also enhance program clarity and readability.
Python 3.12 removed wstr meaning Python extensions [186] need to be modified, [187] and 3.10 added pattern matching to the language. [ 188 ] Python 3.12 dropped some outdated modules, and more will be dropped in the future, deprecated as of 3.13; already deprecated array 'u' format code will emit DeprecationWarning since 3.13 and will be ...