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Encyclopedia :
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Lexicographical order |
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Lexicographical orderIn mathematics, the lexicographical order, or dictionary order, is a natural order structure of the cartesian product of two ordered sets. Given A and B, two ordered sets, the lexicographical order in the cartesian product A × B is defined as:(a,b) ≤ (a′,b′) if and only if a < a′, or a = a′ and b ≤ b′. The name comes from its generalizing the order given to words in a dictionary: a sequence of letters (i.e. a word)
For the purpose of dictionaries, etc., one may assume that all words have the same length, by adding blank spaces at the end, and considering the blank space as a special character which comes before any other letter in the alphabet. This also allows ordering of phrases. See alphabetical order. An important property of the lexicographical order is that it preserves well-orders, that is, if A and B are well-ordered sets, then the product set A × B with the lexicographical order is also well-ordered. Case of multiple products Suppose The dictionary ordering That is, if one of the terms Informally, This could be more elegantly defined recursively by defining the ordering of any set
: This will satisfy
MonomialsIn algebra it is traditional to order terms in a polynomial, by ordering the monomials in the indeterminates. This is fundamental, in order to have a normal form. Such matters are typically left implicit in discussion between humans, but must of course be dealt with exactly in computer algebra. In practice one has an alphabet of indeterminates X, Y, ... and orders all monomials formed from them by a variant of lexicographical order. For example if one decides to order the alphabet by
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