two-valued property - significado y definición. Qué es two-valued property
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Qué (quién) es two-valued property - definición

Integral-valued polynomial; Bunyakovsky's property; Bunyakovsky property; Numerical polynomial; Integer valued polynomial

Many-valued logic         
PROPOSITIONAL CALCULUS IN WHICH THERE ARE MORE THAN TWO TRUTH VALUES
Multiple-valued logic; Many valued logic; Multivalued logic; Polyvalued logic; Many-valued logics; Belnap logic; Many-Valued Logics; Multi-valued logics; Multi-valued logic; Multiple valued logic; Multi valued logic; Poly-valued logic; Poly valued logic; Manyvalued logic; MV logic; M-V logic; MV-logic; Polyvalent logic; Applications of many-valued logic; Bochvar logic; History of many-valued logic; Rose logic
Many-valued logic (also multi- or multiple-valued logic) refers to a propositional calculus in which there are more than two truth values. Traditionally, in Aristotle's logical calculus, there were only two possible values (i.
property         
PHYSICAL OR INTANGIBLE ENTITY, OWNED BY A PERSON OR A GROUP OF PEOPLE
Legal property; Land owner; Property (ownership right); Rights to property; Res privata; Proprietary right; Property theory
n. anything that is owned by a person or entity. Property is divided into two types: "real property," which is any interest in land, real estate, growing plants or the improvements on it, and "personal property" (sometimes called "personalty"), which is everything else. "Common property" is ownership by more than one person of the same possession. "Community property" is a form of joint ownership between husband and wife recognized in several states. "Separate property" is property owned by one spouse only in a community property state, or a married woman's sole ownership in some states. "Public property" refers to ownership by a governmental body such as the federal, state, county or city governments or their agencies (e.g. school or redevelopment districts). The government and the courts are obligated to protect property rights and to help clarify ownership. See also: common property community property personal property personalty public property real property separate property
property         
PHYSICAL OR INTANGIBLE ENTITY, OWNED BY A PERSON OR A GROUP OF PEOPLE
Legal property; Land owner; Property (ownership right); Rights to property; Res privata; Proprietary right; Property theory
n.
1.
Quality, attribute, peculiarity, characteristic.
2.
Wealth, estate, goods, possessions, one's own, thing owned.
3.
Ownership, exclusive right.
4.
Character, disposition.
5.
Participation.

Wikipedia

Integer-valued polynomial

In mathematics, an integer-valued polynomial (also known as a numerical polynomial) P ( t ) {\displaystyle P(t)} is a polynomial whose value P ( n ) {\displaystyle P(n)} is an integer for every integer n. Every polynomial with integer coefficients is integer-valued, but the converse is not true. For example, the polynomial

1 2 t 2 + 1 2 t = 1 2 t ( t + 1 ) {\displaystyle {\frac {1}{2}}t^{2}+{\frac {1}{2}}t={\frac {1}{2}}t(t+1)}

takes on integer values whenever t is an integer. That is because one of t and t + 1 {\displaystyle t+1} must be an even number. (The values this polynomial takes are the triangular numbers.)

Integer-valued polynomials are objects of study in their own right in algebra, and frequently appear in algebraic topology.