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  2. Necessity and sufficiency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Necessity_and_sufficiency

    A condition can be both necessary and sufficient. For example, at present, "today is the Fourth of July" is a necessary and sufficient condition for "today is Independence Day in the United States". Similarly, a necessary and sufficient condition for invertibility of a matrix M is that M has a nonzero determinant.

  3. If and only if - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/If_and_only_if

    In writing, phrases commonly used as alternatives to P "if and only if" Q include: Q is necessary and sufficient for P, for P it is necessary and sufficient that Q, P is equivalent (or materially equivalent) to Q (compare with material implication), P precisely if Q, P precisely (or exactly) when Q, P exactly in case Q, and P just in case Q. [3]

  4. Hall's marriage theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hall's_marriage_theorem

    In mathematics, Hall's marriage theorem, proved by Philip Hall (), is a theorem with two equivalent formulations.In each case, the theorem gives a necessary and sufficient condition for an object to exist:

  5. Specht's theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Specht's_theorem

    In mathematics, Specht's theorem gives a necessary and sufficient condition for two complex matrices to be unitarily equivalent. It is named after Wilhelm Specht, who proved the theorem in 1940. [1] Two matrices A and B with complex number entries are said to be unitarily equivalent if there exists a unitary matrix U such that B = U *AU. [2]

  6. Sylvester's criterion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sylvester's_criterion

    In mathematics, Sylvester’s criterion is a necessary and sufficient criterion to determine whether a Hermitian matrix is positive-definite. Sylvester's criterion states that a n × n Hermitian matrix M is positive-definite if and only if all the following matrices have a positive determinant: the upper left 1-by-1 corner of M,

  7. Karush–Kuhn–Tucker conditions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karush–Kuhn–Tucker...

    The necessary conditions are sufficient for optimality if the objective function of a maximization problem is a differentiable concave function, the inequality constraints are differentiable convex functions, the equality constraints are affine functions, and Slater's condition holds. [11]

  8. Cauchy–Riemann equations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cauchy–Riemann_equations

    In the field of complex analysis in mathematics, the Cauchy–Riemann equations, named after Augustin Cauchy and Bernhard Riemann, consist of a system of two partial differential equations which form a necessary and sufficient condition for a complex function of a complex variable to be complex differentiable. These equations are

  9. Arzelà–Ascoli theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arzelà–Ascoli_theorem

    The Arzelà–Ascoli theorem is a fundamental result of mathematical analysis giving necessary and sufficient conditions to decide whether every sequence of a given family of real-valued continuous functions defined on a closed and bounded interval has a uniformly convergent subsequence. The main condition is the equicontinuity of