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A partially ordered set (poset for short) is an ordered pair = (,) consisting of a set (called the ground set of ) and a partial order on . When the meaning is clear from context and there is no ambiguity about the partial order, the set X {\displaystyle X} itself is sometimes called a poset.
For a partially ordered set (,), the irreflexive kernel of is denoted as < and is defined by < if and . For arbitrary members x , y ∈ P , {\displaystyle x,y\in P,} exactly one of the following cases applies:
In the first case, the graph is the undirected Hasse diagram of the partially ordered set, and in the second case, the graph is simply the underlying (undirected) graph of the partially ordered set. However, if T is a tree of height > ω, then the Hasse diagram definition does not work.
A Hasse diagram of the factors of 60 ordered by the is-a-divisor-of relation. In order theory, a Hasse diagram (/ ˈ h æ s ə /; German:) is a type of mathematical diagram used to represent a finite partially ordered set, in the form of a drawing of its transitive reduction.
A partial order of dimension 4 (shown as a Hasse diagram) and four total orderings that form a realizer for this partial order.. In mathematics, the dimension of a partially ordered set (poset) is the smallest number of total orders the intersection of which gives rise to the partial order.
The directed preordered set (,) is partially ordered if and only if has exactly one element. All pairs of elements from R {\displaystyle R} are comparable and every element of R {\displaystyle R} is a greatest element (and thus also a maximal element) of ( R , ≤ ) . {\displaystyle (R,\leq ).}
A given partially ordered set may have several different completions. For instance, one completion of any partially ordered set S is the set of its downwardly closed subsets ordered by inclusion. S is embedded in this (complete) lattice by mapping each element x to the lower set of elements that are less than or equal to x.
An ordered set in which every pair of elements is comparable is called totally ordered. Every subset S of a partially ordered set P can itself be seen as partially ordered by restricting the order relation inherited from P to S. A subset S of a partially ordered set P is called a chain (in P) if it is totally ordered in the inherited order.