optimizing rule - определение. Что такое optimizing rule
Diclib.com
Словарь ChatGPT
Введите слово или словосочетание на любом языке 👆
Язык:

Перевод и анализ слов искусственным интеллектом ChatGPT

На этой странице Вы можете получить подробный анализ слова или словосочетания, произведенный с помощью лучшей на сегодняшний день технологии искусственного интеллекта:

  • как употребляется слово
  • частота употребления
  • используется оно чаще в устной или письменной речи
  • варианты перевода слова
  • примеры употребления (несколько фраз с переводом)
  • этимология

Что (кто) такое optimizing rule - определение

RULE THAT USES DERIVATIVES TO HELP EVALUATE LIMITS INVOLVING INDETERMINATE FORMS
LHospitals rule; LHospital's rule; L'Hopital's rule; LHopital's rule; L'Hospital's rule; LHopitals rule; L'hopital's rule; L'Hopital's Rule; L'Hôspital's rule; L'hopitals rule; L'Hospital's Rule; L'Hospital rule; Wopitals rule; L'Hôpital's Rule; L’Hospital’s rule; L'hospital's rule; L'hôpital's rule; L'Hopital rule; L'Hôpital rule; Hopital's rule; De L'Hospital's Rule; Bernoulli's rule; L' Hopital's Rule; Hospitals rule; Lhopitals rule; Rule of L'Hôpital
  • ''g''′(0)}} = −2}}.
Найдено результатов: 1624
Zaitsev's rule         
  • 77px
  • 60px
  • 75px
  • 60px
  • Alexander Mikhaylovich Zaitsev
  • 339px
  • 579px
  • 310px
  • 322px
  • 346px
  • 315px
EMPIRICAL RULE PREDICTING THE MAJOR PRODUCT(S) IN ELIMINATION REACTION
Saytzeff's rule; Zaitsev's Rule; Zaitsev's product; Saytzeff rule; Saytzeff's Rule; Saytzev's rule; Zaytsev product; Saytzeff Rule; Zaitsev rule; Saytsev's rule; Saytsev rule
In organic chemistry, Zaitsev's rule (or Saytzeff's rule, Saytzev's rule) is an empirical rule for predicting the favored alkene product(s) in elimination reactions. While at the University of Kazan, Russian chemist Alexander Zaitsev studied a variety of different elimination reactions and observed a general trend in the resulting alkenes.
mail box rule         
RULE REGARDING ACCEPTANCE BY POST OF OFFERS IN ANGLO-AMERICAN CONTRACT LAW
Mail box rule; Postal acceptance rule; Postal rule; Postage rule; Deposited acceptance rule; Mailbox rule; Postal exception
n. in contract law, making a written offer or acceptance of offer valid if sent in the mail, with postage, within the time in which the offer must be accepted, unless the offer requires acceptance by personal delivery on or before the specified date. The rule may also apply to mailing payments of insurance premiums when due. However, relying on this so-called "rule" can be dangerous, since the party awaiting the acceptance or payment may cancel the offer if there is no response in hand when the time runs out.
Posting rule         
RULE REGARDING ACCEPTANCE BY POST OF OFFERS IN ANGLO-AMERICAN CONTRACT LAW
Mail box rule; Postal acceptance rule; Postal rule; Postage rule; Deposited acceptance rule; Mailbox rule; Postal exception
The posting rule (or mailbox rule in the United States, also known as the "postal rule" or "deposited acceptance rule") is an exception to the general rule of contract law in common law countries that acceptance of an offer takes place when communicated. Under the posting rule, that acceptance takes effect when a letter is posted (that is, dropped in a post box or handed to a postal worker); the post office will be the universal service provider, such as the UK's Royal Mail, the Australia Post, or the United States Postal Service.
Rule, Britannia!         
  • ''Britannia rule the waves'': decorated plate made in [[Liverpool]] circa 1793–1794 ([[Musée de la Révolution française]]).
  • Second page
BRITISH PATRIOTIC SONG
Rule, Britannia; Rule Brittania; Rule britannia; Rule Brittania!; Rule, Brittania!; Rule Britannia!; Hail Britannia; Hail Britannia!; Rule Britannia; Rule, Brittania; Rule Britannia, Britannia rule the waves
"Rule, Britannia!" is a British patriotic song, originating from the 1740 poem "Rule, Britannia" by James Thomson and set to music by Thomas Arne in the same year.
Mercy rule         
RULE THAT ENDS A SPORTS EVENT DUE TO AN INSURMOUNTABLE LEAD
Mercy rule (baseball); Run rule; Skunk rule; Ten-run rule; Ten run rule; Run-ahead rule; Run ahead rule
A mercy rule, slaughter rule, knockout rule, or skunk rule ends a two-competitor sports competition earlier than the scheduled endpoint if one competitor has a very large and presumably insurmountable scoring lead over the other. It is called the mercy rule because it spares further humiliation for the loser.
Kevin James Rule         
BOTANIST (BORN 1941)
Kevin Rule
Kevin James Rule was born at Daylesford, Victoria on 9 November 1941. He was a secondary school teacher and had a particular interest in the taxonomy of Australian eucalyptus.
International rule (sailing)         
  • the 15mR ''Ma'oona'' in 1908
  • Intrepid]]''
  • The 19mR ''Octavia'' racing with the 15mR class ([[Kiel Week]], 1913)
The International Rule; Metre rule (sailing); The International Rule sailing; Metre Rule; Metre rule; Yacht handicapping; International Rule (sailing); Meter rule; IYRU International Rule
The International rule, also known as the Metre rule, was created for the measuring and rating of yachts to allow different designs of yacht to race together under a handicap system. Prior to the ratification of the International rule in 1907, countries raced yachts under their own national rules and international competition was always subject to various forms of subjective handicapping.
Fifty-move rule         
CHESS RULE THAT A PLAYER CAN CLAIM A DRAW IF NO CAPTURE HAS BEEN MADE AND NO PAWN HAS BEEN MOVED IN THE LAST 50 MOVES
50 move rule; 50-move rule; Fifty move rule; 75-move rule; Seventyfive-move rule; Seventy-five move rule; Seventy-five-move rule; Draft:Seventy-five-move rule
The fifty-move rule in chess states that a player can claim a draw if no has been made and no pawn has been moved in the last fifty moves (for this purpose a "move" consists of a player completing a turn followed by the opponent completing a turn). The purpose of this rule is to prevent a player with no chance of winning from obstinately continuing to play indefinitely or seeking to win by tiring the opponent.
Phase rule         
  • critical point]] of carbon dioxide
GENERAL PRINCIPLE IN THERMODYNAMICS REGARDING PVT SYSTEMS IN EQUILIBRIUM
Gibbs phase rule; Phase equilibria; Phase equilibrium; Phase Equilibria; Gibbs' Phase Rule; Gibb's phase rule; Phase Rule; Gibbs Phase Rule; Gibbs rule; Gibbs' phase rule; Gibbs's phase rule
·add. ·- A generalization with regard to systems of chemical equilibrium, discovered by Prof. J. Willard Gibbs. It may be stated thus: The degree of variableness (number of degrees of freedom) of a system is equal to the number of components minus the number of phases, plus two. Thus, if the components be salt and water, and the phases salt, ice, saturated solution, and vapor, the system is invariant, that is, there is only one set of conditions under which these four phases can exist in equilibrium. If only three phases be considered, the system is univariant, that is, the fixing of one condition, as temperature, determines the others.
Boukólos rule         
Boukolos rule
The boukólos rule is a phonological rule of the Proto-Indo-European language (PIE). It states that a labiovelar stop () dissimilates to an ordinary velar stop () next to the vowel or its corresponding glide .

Википедия

L'Hôpital's rule

L'Hôpital's rule (, loh-pee-TAHL), also known as Bernoulli's rule, is a mathematical theorem that allows evaluating limits of indeterminate forms using derivatives. Application (or repeated application) of the rule often converts an indeterminate form to an expression that can be easily evaluated by substitution. The rule is named after the 17th-century French mathematician Guillaume de l'Hôpital. Although the rule is often attributed to l'Hôpital, the theorem was first introduced to him in 1694 by the Swiss mathematician Johann Bernoulli.

L'Hôpital's rule states that for functions f and g which are differentiable on an open interval I except possibly at a point c contained in I, if lim x c f ( x ) = lim x c g ( x ) = 0  or  ± , {\textstyle \lim _{x\to c}f(x)=\lim _{x\to c}g(x)=0{\text{ or }}\pm \infty ,} and g ( x ) 0 {\textstyle g'(x)\neq 0} for all x in I with xc, and lim x c f ( x ) g ( x ) {\textstyle \lim _{x\to c}{\frac {f'(x)}{g'(x)}}} exists, then

lim x c f ( x ) g ( x ) = lim x c f ( x ) g ( x ) . {\displaystyle \lim _{x\to c}{\frac {f(x)}{g(x)}}=\lim _{x\to c}{\frac {f'(x)}{g'(x)}}.}

The differentiation of the numerator and denominator often simplifies the quotient or converts it to a limit that can be evaluated directly.