quasi-inverse - définition. Qu'est-ce que quasi-inverse
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est quasi-inverse - définition

ELEMENT WITH AN INVERSE WITH RESPECT TO A GIVEN MATHEMATICAL OPERATION; ELEMENT THAT CAN 'UNDO' THE EFFECT OF ANOTHER GIVEN ELEMENT
Invertible element; Inverse elements; Right invertible; Left invertible; Inverse (ring theory); One-sided inverse; Left inverse element; Quasi-inverse; I-semigroup; U-semigroup; Invertible

Invertible         
·adj Capable of being inverted or turned.
II. Invertible ·adj Incapable of being turned or changed.
III. Invertible ·adj Capable of being changed or converted; as, invertible sugar.
Inverse element         
In mathematics, the concept of an inverse element generalises the concepts of opposite () and reciprocal () of numbers.
Quasi-market         
TYPE OF EXCHANGE SYSTEM
Quasi market
Quasi-markets, are markets which can be supervised and organisationally designed that are intended to create greater desire and more efficiency in comparison to conventional delivery systems, while supporting more accessibility, stability and impartiality than traditional markets. Quasi-markets also can be referred to as internal or planned markets.

Wikipédia

Inverse element

In mathematics, the concept of an inverse element generalises the concepts of opposite (x) and reciprocal (1/x) of numbers.

Given an operation denoted here , and an identity element denoted e, if xy = e, one says that x is a left inverse of y, and that y is a right inverse of x. (An identity element is an element such that x * e = x and e * y = y for all x and y for which the left-hand sides are defined.)

When the operation is associative, if an element x has both a left inverse and a right inverse, then these two inverses are equal and unique; they are called the inverse element or simply the inverse. Often an adjective is added for specifying the operation, such as in additive inverse, multiplicative inverse, and functional inverse. In this case (associative operation), an invertible element is an element that has an inverse. In a ring, an invertible element, also called a unit, is an element that is invertible under multiplication (this is not ambiguous, as every element is invertible under addition).

Inverses are commonly used in groups—where every element is invertible, and rings—where invertible elements are also called units. They are also commonly used for operations that are not defined for all possible operands, such as inverse matrices and inverse functions. This has been generalized to category theory, where, by definition, an isomorphism is an invertible morphism.

The word 'inverse' is derived from Latin: inversus that means 'turned upside down', 'overturned'. This may take its origin from the case of fractions, where the (multiplicative) inverse is obtained by exchanging the numerator and the denominator (the inverse of x y {\displaystyle {\tfrac {x}{y}}} is y x {\displaystyle {\tfrac {y}{x}}} ).