MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Monday November 25, 2024
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, 19:22, 6 November 2016
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| Let us now extend the CSP–GSB calculus in the following way: | | Let us now extend the CSP–GSB calculus in the following way: |
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− | The first extension is the ''reflective extension of logical graphs'', or what may be described as the ''cactus language'', after its principal graph-theoretic data structure. It is generated by generalizing the negation operator <math>\texttt{(_)}\!</math> in a particular manner, treating <math>\texttt{(_)}\!</math> as the ''[[minimal negation operator]]'' of order 1, and adding another such operator for each integer parameter greater than 1. | + | The first extension is the ''reflective extension of logical graphs'', or what may be described as the ''cactus language'', after its principal graph-theoretic data structure. It is generated by generalizing the negation operator <math>\texttt{(} \_ \texttt{)}\!</math> in a particular manner, treating <math>\texttt{(} \_ \texttt{)}\!</math> as the ''[[minimal negation operator]]'' of order 1 and adding another such operator for each order greater than 1. Taken in series, the minimal negation operators are symbolized by parenthesized argument lists of the following shapes: <math>\texttt{(} \_ \texttt{)},\!</math> <math>\texttt{(} \_ \texttt{,} \_ \texttt{)},\!</math> <math>\texttt{(} \_ \texttt{,} \_ \texttt{,} \_ \texttt{)},\!</math> and so on, where the number of argument slots is the order of the reflective negation operator in question. |