cyclically$18394$ - traduzione in spagnolo
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cyclically$18394$ - traduzione in spagnolo

TERNARY RELATION THAT IS CYCLIC (IF [𝑥,𝑦,𝑧] THEN [𝑧,𝑥,𝑦]), ASYMMETRIC (IF [𝑥,𝑦,𝑧] THEN NOT [𝑧,𝑦,𝑥]), TRANSITIVE (IF [𝑤,𝑥,𝑦] AND [𝑤,𝑦,𝑧] THEN [𝑤,𝑥,𝑧]) AND CONNECTED (FOR DISTINCT 𝑥,𝑦,𝑧
Cyclic sequence; Circular order; Circular ordering; Total cyclic order; Cyclically ordered set; Cyclic ordering; Complete cyclic order; Linear cyclic order; L-cyclic order; Circularly ordered set
  • The months are a cyclic order.

cyclically      
adv. cíclicamente
budgetary deficit         
  • The government surplus/deficit of struggling European countries according to [[European sovereign debt crisis]]: [[Italy]], [[Cyprus]], [[Portugal]], [[Spain]], [[Greece]], [[United Kingdom]] and [[Ireland]] against the [[Eurozone]] and the [[United States]] (2000–2013).
  • French government borrowing (budget deficits) as a percentage of GNP, 1960–2009
  • Sectoral financial balances in U.S. economy 1990–2012. By definition, the three balances must net to zero. Since 2009, the U.S. capital surplus and private sector surplus have driven a government budget deficit.
  • United States deficit or surplus percentage 1901 to 2006
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN REVENUES AND SPENDING
Deficits; Budget deficits; Fiscal deficit; Budgetary deficit; Primary deficit; Primary surplus; National deficit; Public Borrowing Requirement; Primary balance (statistical term); Government deficit; User:Balboa17/Primary Balance; Wikipedia:WikiProject Abandoned Drafts/Primary Balance; Primary Balance (statistical term); Government budget deficits; General government balance; Government budget deficit; Government budget surplus; Cyclically-adjusted primary balance; Cyclically adjusted primary balance; Structural budget balance; General government deficit; General government surplus; General budget balance; General budget deficit; General budget surplus; Public fiscal balance; Public fiscal deficit; Public fiscal surplus; Public budget balance; Public budget deficit; Public budget surplus; Fiscal surplus; Federal surpluses; Government budget constraint; Deficit bias
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Wikipedia

Cyclic order

In mathematics, a cyclic order is a way to arrange a set of objects in a circle.[nb] Unlike most structures in order theory, a cyclic order is not modeled as a binary relation, such as "a < b". One does not say that east is "more clockwise" than west. Instead, a cyclic order is defined as a ternary relation [a, b, c], meaning "after a, one reaches b before c". For example, [June, October, February], but not [June, February, October], cf. picture. A ternary relation is called a cyclic order if it is cyclic, asymmetric, transitive, and connected. Dropping the "connected" requirement results in a partial cyclic order.

A set with a cyclic order is called a cyclically ordered set or simply a cycle.[nb] Some familiar cycles are discrete, having only a finite number of elements: there are seven days of the week, four cardinal directions, twelve notes in the chromatic scale, and three plays in rock-paper-scissors. In a finite cycle, each element has a "next element" and a "previous element". There are also cyclic orders with infinitely many elements, such as the oriented unit circle in the plane.

Cyclic orders are closely related to the more familiar linear orders, which arrange objects in a line. Any linear order can be bent into a circle, and any cyclic order can be cut at a point, resulting in a line. These operations, along with the related constructions of intervals and covering maps, mean that questions about cyclic orders can often be transformed into questions about linear orders. Cycles have more symmetries than linear orders, and they often naturally occur as residues of linear structures, as in the finite cyclic groups or the real projective line.