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  2. Complemented lattice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complemented_lattice

    Hasse diagram of a complemented lattice. A point p and a line l of the Fano plane are complements if and only if p does not lie on l.. In the mathematical discipline of order theory, a complemented lattice is a bounded lattice (with least element 0 and greatest element 1), in which every element a has a complement, i.e. an element b satisfying a ∨ b = 1 and a ∧ b = 0.

  3. Lattice (order) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lattice_(order)

    In particular, a bounded-lattice homomorphism (usually called just "lattice homomorphism") between two bounded lattices and should also have the following property: =, =. In the order-theoretic formulation, these conditions just state that a homomorphism of lattices is a function preserving binary meets and joins.

  4. Map of lattices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Map_of_lattices

    A complete lattice is bounded. 11. A heyting algebra is bounded. (def) 12. A bounded lattice is a lattice. (def) 13. A heyting algebra is residuated. 14. A residuated lattice is a lattice. (def) 15. A distributive lattice is modular. [3] 16. A modular complemented lattice is relatively complemented. [4] 17. A boolean algebra is relatively ...

  5. Pseudocomplement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudocomplement

    Every pseudocomplemented lattice is necessarily bounded, i.e. it has a 1 as well. Since the pseudocomplement is unique by definition (if it exists), a pseudocomplemented lattice can be endowed with a unary operation * mapping every element to its pseudocomplement; this structure is sometimes called a p-algebra.

  6. Complete lattice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complete_lattice

    A conditionally complete lattice satisfies at least one of these properties for bounded subsets. For comparison, in a general lattice, only pairs of elements need to have a supremum and an infimum. Every non-empty finite lattice is complete, but infinite lattices may be incomplete.

  7. Geometric lattice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geometric_lattice

    Every interval of a geometric lattice (the subset of the lattice between given lower and upper bound elements) is itself geometric; taking an interval of a geometric lattice corresponds to forming a minor of the associated matroid. Geometric lattices are complemented, and because of the interval property they are also relatively complemented. [7]

  8. Distributive lattice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributive_lattice

    A morphism of distributive lattices is just a lattice homomorphism as given in the article on lattices, i.e. a function that is compatible with the two lattice operations. Because such a morphism of lattices preserves the lattice structure, it will consequently also preserve the distributivity (and thus be a morphism of distributive lattices).

  9. List of order structures in mathematics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_order_structures...

    Lattices, partial orders in which each pair of elements has a greatest lower bound and a least upper bound. Many different types of lattice have been studied; see map of lattices for a list. Partially ordered sets (or posets), orderings in which some pairs are comparable and others might not be