Difference between revisions of "Order Theory (subject)"

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Some order theory is desired for parts of [[Analysis (subject)|analysis]], for this I recommend the reader know at least about [[partial ordering|partial orderings]] and [[poset|posets]], this is because topics like [[Limit|limits]] require some notion of ordering, however since year 2 children are taught to "pretend {{M|<}} is a crocodile, it wants to eat the bigger number" and is fully aware that {{M|5<2}} and such. However it cannot hurt.
 
Some order theory is desired for parts of [[Analysis (subject)|analysis]], for this I recommend the reader know at least about [[partial ordering|partial orderings]] and [[poset|posets]], this is because topics like [[Limit|limits]] require some notion of ordering, however since year 2 children are taught to "pretend {{M|<}} is a crocodile, it wants to eat the bigger number" and is fully aware that {{M|5<2}} and such. However it cannot hurt.
  
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==Statistics==
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The order theory project contains:
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* {{Category statistic|Order Theory Definitions|Definitions}}
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* {{Category statistic|Order Theory Theorems, lemmas and corollaries|Theorems, lemmas and corollaries}}
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* {{Category statistic|Order Theory|(all pages)}}
  
 
{{Order theory navbox|plain}}
 
{{Order theory navbox|plain}}
 
[[Category:Subjects]]
 
[[Category:Subjects]]
 
[[Category:Order Theory]]
 
[[Category:Order Theory]]

Latest revision as of 15:26, 26 February 2016

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Overview

Order theory is the study of certain kinds of relations on sets. Abstract algebra covers the case of a set equipped with functions (which are right-unique relations that map everything in their domain to something), order theory deals instead with relations that are at the very least, transitive and then branches off into lattices - which is studying the directed graphs (or digraphs) that result from various kinds of orderings, called lattice theory.

Required for

Some order theory is desired for parts of analysis, for this I recommend the reader know at least about partial orderings and posets, this is because topics like limits require some notion of ordering, however since year 2 children are taught to "pretend [ilmath]<[/ilmath] is a crocodile, it wants to eat the bigger number" and is fully aware that [ilmath]5<2[/ilmath] and such. However it cannot hurt.

Statistics

The order theory project contains: