quasicompact scheme - définition. Qu'est-ce que quasicompact scheme
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est quasicompact scheme - définition

KIND OF LARGE CARDINAL NUMBER
Quasicompact cardinal

R4RS         
DIALECT OF THE LISP PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE
Scheme Links; R5RS; R4RS; R6RS; Set!; Scheme Programming language; Scheme progamming language; Scheme programming language; R5RS Scheme; Err5rs; ERR5RS; Scheme language; LAML; Scheme (language); RnRS; R7RS; Dr. Scheme; Scheme Lisp
A revision of R3RS, revised in R3.99RS. ftp://altdorf.ai.mit.edu/. ["The Revised^4 Report on the Algorithmic Language Scheme", W. Clinger et al, MIT (Nov 1991)]. (1994-10-28) [Later revisions?]
MIT Scheme         
A SCHEME IMPLEMENTATION WITH INTEGRATED EDITOR AND DEBUGGER
MIT Scheme; Edwin (editor); Mit-scheme
<language> (Previously "C-Scheme") A Scheme implementation by the MIT Scheme Team (Chris Hanson, Jim Miller, Bill Rozas, and many others) with a rich set of utilities, a compiler called Liar and an editor called Edwin. MIT Scheme includes an interpreter, large {run-time library}, Emacs macros, native-code compiler, emacs-like editor, and a source-level debugger. Latest version: 7.7.1, as of 2002-06-18. MIT Scheme conforms fully with R4RS and almost with the IEEE Scheme standard. It runs on Motorola 68000: HP9000, Sun-3, NeXT; MIPS: Decstation, Sony, SGI; HP-PA: 600, 700, 800; VAX: Ultrix, BSD, DEC Alpha: OSF; Intel i386: MS-DOS, MS Windows, and various other Unix systems. See also: LAP, Schematik, Scode. scheme/">http://gnu.org/software/mit-scheme/. Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.lang.scheme.c. Mailing list: mit-scheme-announce@gnu.org (cross-posted to news). E-mail: <mit-scheme-devel@gnu.org> (maintainers). (2003-08-14)
Tanganyika groundnut scheme         
  • Groundnut cultivation in [[Malawi]]
FAILED DEVELOPMENT PLAN IN TANGANYIKA
Groundnut scheme; Tanganyika Groundnut Scheme; Ground nut scheme; East African groundnuts scheme; East African groundnut scheme; Groundnuts Scheme; Groundnuts scheme; Ground Nuts Order; East Africa Groundnut Scheme
The Tanganyika groundnut scheme, or East Africa groundnut scheme, was a failed attempt by the British government to cultivate tracts of its African trust territory Tanganyika (now part of Tanzania) with peanuts. Launched in the aftermath of World War II by the Labour Party administration of prime minister Clement Attlee, the goal was to produce urgently needed oilseeds on a projected 3 million acres (5,000 sq miles, or over 1 million hectares) of land, in order to increase margarine supplies in Britain and develop a neglected backwater of the British Empire.

Wikipédia

Subcompact cardinal

In mathematics, a subcompact cardinal is a certain kind of large cardinal number.

A cardinal number κ is subcompact if and only if for every A ⊂ H(κ+) there is a non-trivial elementary embedding j:(H(μ+), B) → (H(κ+), A) (where H(κ+) is the set of all sets of cardinality hereditarily less than κ+) with critical point μ and j(μ) = κ.

Analogously, κ is a quasicompact cardinal if and only if for every A ⊂ H(κ+) there is a non-trivial elementary embedding j:(H(κ+), A) → (H(μ+), B) with critical point κ and j(κ) = μ.

H(λ) consists of all sets whose transitive closure has cardinality less than λ.

Every quasicompact cardinal is subcompact. Quasicompactness is a strengthening of subcompactness in that it projects large cardinal properties upwards. The relationship is analogous to that of extendible versus supercompact cardinals. Quasicompactness may be viewed as a strengthened or "boldface" version of 1-extendibility. Existence of subcompact cardinals implies existence of many 1-extendible cardinals, and hence many superstrong cardinals. Existence of a 2κ-supercompact cardinal κ implies existence of many quasicompact cardinals.

Subcompact cardinals are noteworthy as the least large cardinals implying a failure of the square principle. If κ is subcompact, then the square principle fails at κ. Canonical inner models at the level of subcompact cardinals satisfy the square principle at all but subcompact cardinals. (Existence of such models has not yet been proved, but in any case the square principle can be forced for weaker cardinals.)

Quasicompactness is one of the strongest large cardinal properties that can be witnessed by current inner models that do not use long extenders. For current inner models, the elementary embeddings included are determined by their effect on P(κ) (as computed at the stage the embedding is included), where κ is the critical point. This prevents them from witnessing even a κ+ strongly compact cardinal κ.

Subcompact and quasicompact cardinals were defined by Ronald Jensen.