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  2. Integration by parts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integration_by_parts

    Two other well-known examples are when integration by parts is applied to a function expressed as a product of 1 and itself. This works if the derivative of the function is known, and the integral of this derivative times is also known. The first example is ⁡ (). We write this as:

  3. Cartesian product - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cartesian_product

    An example of this is R 3 = R × R × R, with R again the set of real numbers, [1] and more generally R n. The n-ary Cartesian power of a set X is isomorphic to the space of functions from an n-element set to X. As a special case, the 0-ary Cartesian power of X may be taken to be a singleton set, corresponding to the empty function with codomain X.

  4. Dedekind cut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dedekind_cut

    Dedekind cuts can be generalized from the rational numbers to any totally ordered set by defining a Dedekind cut as a partition of a totally ordered set into two non-empty parts A and B, such that A is closed downwards (meaning that for all a in A, x ≤ a implies that x is in A as well) and B is closed upwards, and A contains no

  5. Partition of a set - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partition_of_a_set

    Partitions of a 4-element set ordered by refinement. A partition α of a set X is a refinement of a partition ρ of X—and we say that α is finer than ρ and that ρ is coarser than α—if every element of α is a subset of some element of ρ. Informally, this means that α is a further fragmentation of ρ. In that case, it is written that ...

  6. Subset sum problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subset_sum_problem

    For example, if all input values are positive and bounded by some constant C, then B is at most N C, so the time required is (). This solution does not count as polynomial time in complexity theory because B − A {\displaystyle B-A} is not polynomial in the size of the problem, which is the number of bits used to represent it.

  7. Product (mathematics) - Wikipedia

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

    In set theory, a Cartesian product is a mathematical operation which returns a set (or product set) from multiple sets. That is, for sets A and B, the Cartesian product A × B is the set of all ordered pairs (a, b) —where a ∈ A and b ∈ B. [5] The class of all things (of a given type) that have Cartesian products is called a Cartesian ...

  8. List of partition topics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_partition_topics

    Generally, a partition is a division of a whole into non-overlapping parts. Among the kinds of partitions considered in mathematics are partition of a set or an ordered partition of a set, partition of a graph, partition of an integer, partition of an interval, partition of unity, partition of a matrix; see block matrix, and

  9. Product (category theory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Product_(category_theory)

    In category theory, the product of two (or more) objects in a category is a notion designed to capture the essence behind constructions in other areas of mathematics such as the Cartesian product of sets, the direct product of groups or rings, and the product of topological spaces.