usual topology - traducción al ruso
Diclib.com
Diccionario en línea

usual topology - traducción al ruso

SPACE FORMED BY THE ''N''-TUPLES OF REAL NUMBERS
Real n-space; R-n; Real plane; Standard topology; Usual topology; R^n; Real coordinate plane
  • (''n'' + 1)}} orthant (standard cone).
  • [[Cartesian coordinates]] identify points of the [[Euclidean plane]] with pairs of real numbers

usual topology         

математика

обычная топология

indiscrete topology         
TOPOLOGY WHERE THE ONLY OPEN SETS ARE THE EMPTY SET AND THE ENTIRE SPACE
Indiscrete topology; Indiscrete space; Codiscrete topology

математика

антидискретная топология

trivial topology         
TOPOLOGY WHERE THE ONLY OPEN SETS ARE THE EMPTY SET AND THE ENTIRE SPACE
Indiscrete topology; Indiscrete space; Codiscrete topology

математика

тривиальная топология

Definición

usual
Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.
1.
Usual is used to describe what happens or what is done most often in a particular situation.
It is a neighborhood beset by all the usual inner-city problems...
She's smiling her usual friendly smile...
After lunch there was a little more clearing up to do than usual...
It is usual to tip waiters, porters, guides and drivers.
= normal
ADJ: det ADJ, v-link ADJ, oft it v-link ADJ to-inf
Usual is also a noun.
The stout barman in a bow tie presented himself to take their order. 'Good morning, sir. The usual?'
N-SING: the N
2.
You use as usual to indicate that you are describing something that normally happens or that is normally the case.
As usual there will be the local and regional elections on June the twelfth...
The front pages are, as usual, a mixture of domestic and foreign news.
PHRASE: PHR with cl
3.
If something happens as usual, it happens in the way that it normally does, especially when other things have changed.
When somebody died everything went on as usual, as if it had never happened...
PHRASE: PHR after v
4.
business as usual: see business

Wikipedia

Real coordinate space

In mathematics, the real coordinate space of dimension n, denoted Rn or R n {\displaystyle \mathbb {R} ^{n}} , is the set of the n-tuples of real numbers, that is the set of all sequences of n real numbers. Special cases are called the real line R1 and the real coordinate plane R2. With component-wise addition and scalar multiplication, it is a real vector space, and its elements are called coordinate vectors.

The coordinates over any basis of the elements of a real vector space form a real coordinate space of the same dimension as that of the vector space. Similarly, the Cartesian coordinates of the points of a Euclidean space of dimension n form a real coordinate space of dimension n.

These one to one correspondences between vectors, points and coordinate vectors explain the names of coordinate space and coordinate vector. It allows using geometric terms and methods for studying real coordinate spaces, and, conversely, to use methods of calculus in geometry. This approach of geometry was introduced by René Descartes in the 17th century. It is widely used, as it allows locating points in Euclidean spaces, and computing with them.