ordering procedure - definizione. Che cos'è ordering procedure
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Cosa (chi) è ordering procedure - definizione

STATEMENT THAT ALL SETS OF POSITIVE NUMBERS CONTAINS A LEAST ELEMENT
Well-ordering axiom; Well Ordering Principle; Well ordering principal; Well ordering principle; Least integer principle

Credé's prophylaxis         
MEDICAL PROCEDURE PERFORMED ON NEWBORNS
Crede procedure; Credé procedure
Credé procedure is the practice of washing a newborn's eyes with a 2% silver nitrate solution to protect against neonatal conjunctivitis caused by Neisseria gonorrhoeae.
Radiotelephony procedure         
METHODS TO MAKE VOICE COMMUNICATIONS UNDERSTOOD OVER A POTENTIALLY DEGRADED CHANNEL
Radio language; Communications discipline; Voice procedure; Radiotelephony voice procedure
Radiotelephony procedure (also on-air protocol and voice procedure) includes various techniques used to clarify, simplify and standardize spoken communications over two-way radios, in use by the armed forces, in civil aviation, police and fire dispatching systems, citizens' band radio (CB), and amateur radio.
Procedure and Privileges Committee         
SELECT COMMITTEE OF THE HOUSE OF LORDS
Procedure Committee (House of Lords); Procedure and Privileges Committee (House of Lords)
The Procedure and Privileges Committee is a select committee of the House of Lords in the Parliament of the United Kingdom. The remit of the committee is to review House procedure and privileges.

Wikipedia

Well-ordering principle

In mathematics, the well-ordering principle states that every non-empty set of positive integers contains a least element. In other words, the set of positive integers is well-ordered by its "natural" or "magnitude" order in which x {\displaystyle x} precedes y {\displaystyle y} if and only if y {\displaystyle y} is either x {\displaystyle x} or the sum of x {\displaystyle x} and some positive integer (other orderings include the ordering 2 , 4 , 6 , . . . {\displaystyle 2,4,6,...} ; and 1 , 3 , 5 , . . . {\displaystyle 1,3,5,...} ).

The phrase "well-ordering principle" is sometimes taken to be synonymous with the "well-ordering theorem". On other occasions it is understood to be the proposition that the set of integers { , 2 , 1 , 0 , 1 , 2 , 3 , } {\displaystyle \{\ldots ,-2,-1,0,1,2,3,\ldots \}} contains a well-ordered subset, called the natural numbers, in which every nonempty subset contains a least element.