MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Tuesday September 02, 2025
Jump to navigationJump to search
491 bytes added
, 02:48, 29 August 2007
Line 819: |
Line 819: |
| The following conventions are useful for discussing the set-theoretic extensions of the staging relations and staging operations of an OG: | | The following conventions are useful for discussing the set-theoretic extensions of the staging relations and staging operations of an OG: |
| | | |
− | # The standing relation of an OG is denoted by the symbol ":<", pronounced ''set-in'', so that :< ? JxPxQ or :< ? J?X?X. | + | # The standing relation of an OG is denoted by the symbol "<font face="system">:<s><</s></font>", pronounced ''set-in'', so that <font face="system">:<s><</s></font> ⊆ ''J'' × ''P'' × ''Q'' or <font face="system">:<s><</s></font> ⊆ ''J'' × ''X'' × ''X''. |
− | # The propping relation of an OG is denoted by the symbol ":>", pronounced ''set-on'', so that :> ? J?Q?P or :> ? J?X?X. | + | # The propping relation of an OG is denoted by the symbol "<font face="system">:<s>></s></font>", pronounced ''set-on'', so that <font face="system">:<s>></s></font> ⊆ ''J'' × ''Q'' × ''P'' or <font face="system">:<s>></s></font> ⊆ ''J'' × ''X'' × ''X''. |
| | | |
− | Often one's level of interest in a genre is ''purely generic''. When the relevant genre is regarded as an indexed family of dyadic relations, G = {Gj}, then this generic interest is tantamount to having one's concern rest with the union of all the dyadic relations in the genre. | + | Often one's level of interest in a genre is ''purely generic''. When the relevant genre is regarded as an indexed family of dyadic relations, ''G'' = {''G''<sub>''j''</sub>}, then this generic interest is tantamount to having one's concern rest with the union of all the dyadic relations in the genre. |
| | | |
| : UJG = Uj Gj = {‹x, y› ? X?X : ‹x, y› ? Gj for some j ? J}. | | : UJG = Uj Gj = {‹x, y› ? X?X : ‹x, y› ? Gj for some j ? J}. |