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  2. Bijection, injection and surjection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bijection,_injection_and...

    Injective composition: the second function need not be injective. A function is injective (one-to-one) if each possible element of the codomain is mapped to by at most one argument. Equivalently, a function is injective if it maps distinct arguments to distinct images. An injective function is an injection. [1] The formal definition is the ...

  3. Injective function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Injective_function

    In mathematics, an injective function (also known as injection, or one-to-one function [1]) is a function f that maps distinct elements of its domain to distinct elements of its codomain; that is, x 1 ≠ x 2 implies f(x 1) ≠ f(x 2) (equivalently by contraposition, f(x 1) = f(x 2) implies x 1 = x 2).

  4. Inclusion map - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inclusion_map

    This and other analogous injective functions [3] from substructures are sometimes called natural injections. Given any morphism f {\displaystyle f} between objects X {\displaystyle X} and Y {\displaystyle Y} , if there is an inclusion map ι : A → X {\displaystyle \iota :A\to X} into the domain X {\displaystyle X} , then one can form the ...

  5. Mapping cylinder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mapping_cylinder

    Given a map :, the mapping cylinder is a space , together with a cofibration ~: and a surjective homotopy equivalence (indeed, Y is a deformation retract of ), such that the composition equals f. Thus the space Y gets replaced with a homotopy equivalent space M f {\displaystyle M_{f}} , and the map f with a lifted map f ~ {\displaystyle {\tilde ...

  6. Power set - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_set

    Such an injective mapping from P (S) to integers is arbitrary, so this representation of all the subsets of S is not unique, but the sort order of the enumerated set does not change its cardinality. (E.g., { ( y , 1), ( z , 2), ( x , 3) } can be used to construct another injective mapping from P ( S ) to the integers without changing the number ...

  7. Injective object - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Injective_object

    In the category of metric spaces, Met, an injective object is an injective metric space, and the injective hull of a metric space is its tight span. In the category of T 0 spaces and continuous mappings, an injective object is always a Scott topology on a continuous lattice, and therefore it is always sober and locally compact.

  8. Embedding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embedding

    In general topology, an embedding is a homeomorphism onto its image. [3] More explicitly, an injective continuous map : between topological spaces and is a topological embedding if yields a homeomorphism between and () (where () carries the subspace topology inherited from ).

  9. Jordan curve theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jordan_curve_theorem

    A Jordan curve or a simple closed curve in the plane R 2 is the image C of an injective continuous map of a circle into the plane, φ: S 1 → R 2. A Jordan arc in the plane is the image of an injective continuous map of a closed and bounded interval [a, b] into the plane. It is a plane curve that is not necessarily smooth nor algebraic.