Sole sufficient operator
MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Thursday November 21, 2024
A sole sufficient operator or a sole sufficient connective is an operator that is sufficient by itself to generate all of the operators in a specified class of operators. In logic, it is a logical operator that suffices to generate all of the boolean-valued functions, \(f : X \to \mathbb{B} \), where \(X\!\) is an arbitrary set and where \(\mathbb{B}\) is a generic 2-element set, typically \(\mathbb{B} = \{ 0, 1 \} = \{ false, true \}\), in particular, to generate all of the finitary boolean functions, \( f : \mathbb{B}^k \to \mathbb{B} \).
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- Sole Sufficient Operator @ Beta Wikiversity
- Sole Sufficient Operator @ MyWikiBiz
- Sole Sufficient Operator @ NetKnowledge
- Sole Sufficient Operator @ SemanticWeb
Logical operators
Related topics
- Propositional calculus
- Sole sufficient operator
- Truth table
- Universe of discourse
- Zeroth order logic
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Portions of the above article were adapted from the following sources under the GNU Free Documentation License, under other applicable licenses, or by permission of the copyright holders.
- Sole Sufficient Operator, MyWikiBiz
- Sole Sufficient Operator, Beta Wikiversity
- Sole Sufficient Operator, MathWeb Wiki
- Sole Sufficient Operator, NetKnowledge
- Sole Sufficient Operator, P2P Foundation
- Sole Sufficient Operator, PlanetMath
- Sole Sufficient Operator, SemanticWeb
- Sole Sufficient Operator, GetWiki
- Sole Sufficient Operator, Wikinfo
- Sole Sufficient Operator, Textop Wiki
- Sole Sufficient Operator, Wikipedia
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