Search Results for ""
41 - 50 of 2557 for Set ComplementSearch Results
If f is a function on an open set U, then the zero set of f is the set Z={z in U:f(z)=0}. A subset of a topological space X is called a zero set if it is equal to f^(-1)(0) ...
A set partition of a set S is a collection of disjoint subsets of S whose union is S. The number of partitions of the set {k}_(k=1)^n is called a Bell number.
A set having exactly one element a. A singleton set is denoted by {a} and is the simplest example of a nonempty set.
A set S with a single point P removed is called a punctured set, written S\{P}.
The Mandelbar set is a fractal set analogous to the Mandelbrot set or its generalization to a higher power with the variable z replaced by its complex conjugate z^_.
The set of points, known as boundary points, which are members of the set closure of a given set S and the set closure of its complement set. The boundary is sometimes called ...
A degree set is a set of integers that make up a degree sequence. Any set of positive integers is the degree set for some graph, because any odd integer from that set can be ...
A Julia set J consisting of a set of isolated points which is formed by taking a point outside an underlying set M (e.g., the Mandelbrot set). If the point is outside but ...
The concept of irredundance was introduced by Cockayne et al. (1978). Let N_G[v] denote the graph neighborhood of a vertex v in a graph G (including v itself), and let N_G[S] ...
A countable set is a set that is either finite or denumerable. However, some authors (e.g., Ciesielski 1997, p. 64) use the definition "equipollent to the finite ordinals," ...
...
View search results from all Wolfram sites (33997 matches)

