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  2. List of mathematical series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mathematical_series

    An infinite series of any rational function of can be reduced to a finite series of polygamma functions, by use of partial fraction decomposition, [8] as explained here. This fact can also be applied to finite series of rational functions, allowing the result to be computed in constant time even when the series contains a large number of terms.

  3. List of limits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_limits

    If () = = and () () for all x in an open interval that contains c, except possibly c itself, =. This is known as the squeeze theorem . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] This applies even in the cases that f ( x ) and g ( x ) take on different values at c , or are discontinuous at c .

  4. Geometric progression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geometric_progression

    Diagram illustrating three basic geometric sequences of the pattern 1(r n−1) up to 6 iterations deep.The first block is a unit block and the dashed line represents the infinite sum of the sequence, a number that it will forever approach but never touch: 2, 3/2, and 4/3 respectively.

  5. Category:Mathematical series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Mathematical_series

    Lambert series; Lambert summation; Laplace limit; Large set (combinatorics) Lauricella hypergeometric series; Leibniz formula for π; Levi-Civita field; Lévy–Steinitz theorem; Lidstone series; Liouville–Neumann series; Lp space

  6. OpenDocument technical specification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenDocument_technical...

    To indicate which version of the OpenDocument specification a file complies with, all root elements take an office:version attribute (in the format revision.version, such as office:version="1.1"), which identifies the version of ODF specification that defined the associated element, its schema, its complete content, and its interpretation.

  7. Series (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Series_(mathematics)

    In general, grouping the terms of a series creates a new series with a sequence of partial sums that is a subsequence of the partial sums of the original series. This means that if the original series converges, so does the new series after grouping: all infinite subsequences of a convergent sequence also converge to the same limit.

  8. FASTA format - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FASTA_format

    A sequence begins with a greater-than character (">") followed by a description of the sequence (all in a single line). The lines immediately following the description line are the sequence representation, with one letter per amino acid or nucleic acid, and are typically no more than 80 characters in length. For example:

  9. Category:Sequences and series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Sequences_and_series

    In mathematics, a sequence is a list of objects (or events) which have been ordered in a sequential fashion; such that each member either comes before, or after, every other member. More formally, a sequence is a function with a domain equal to the set of positive integers. A series is a sum of a sequence of terms. That is, a series is a list ...