truth tables - significado y definición. Qué es truth tables
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Qué (quién) es truth tables - definición

PLAY WRITTEN BY TERENCE RATTIGAN
Separate Tables (play); Separate tables
  • First edition (publ. [[Hamish Hamilton]], 1955)

truth table         
MATHEMATICAL TABLE USED IN LOGIC
Truth tables; Truth-table; Truth Tables; Truth Table; Truthtable; Logical truth table
¦ noun Logic
1. a diagram in rows showing how the truth or falsity of a proposition varies with that of its components.
2. Electronics a similar diagram of the outputs from all possible combinations of input.
truth table         
MATHEMATICAL TABLE USED IN LOGIC
Truth tables; Truth-table; Truth Tables; Truth Table; Truthtable; Logical truth table
<logic> A table listing all possible combinations of inputs and the corresponding output of a Boolean function such as AND, OR, NOT, IMPLIES, XOR, NAND, NOR. Truth tables can be used as a means of representing a function or as an aid in designing a circuit to implement it. (1998-07-30)
Truth table         
MATHEMATICAL TABLE USED IN LOGIC
Truth tables; Truth-table; Truth Tables; Truth Table; Truthtable; Logical truth table
A truth table is a mathematical table used in logic—specifically in connection with Boolean algebra, boolean functions, and propositional calculus—which sets out the functional values of logical expressions on each of their functional arguments, that is, for each combination of values taken by their logical variables.Enderton, 2001 In particular, truth tables can be used to show whether a propositional expression is true for all legitimate input values, that is, logically valid.

Wikipedia

Separate Tables


Separate Tables is the collective name of two one-act plays by Terence Rattigan, both taking place in the Beauregard Private Hotel, Bournemouth, on the south coast of England. The first play, titled Table by the Window, focuses on the troubled relationship between a disgraced Labour politician and his ex-wife. The second play, Table Number Seven, is set about 18 months after the events of the previous play, and deals with the touching friendship between a repressed spinster and Major Pollock, a kindly but bogus man posing as an upper-class retired army officer. The two main roles in both plays are written to be played by the same performers. The secondary characters – permanent residents, the hotel's manager, and members of the staff – appear in both plays. The plays are about people who are driven by loneliness into a state of desperation.