not complete
Look at other dictionaries:
not perfect — not complete, is not all that he appears … English contemporary dictionary
Complete metric space — Cauchy completion redirects here. For the use in category theory, see Karoubi envelope. In mathematical analysis, a metric space M is called complete (or Cauchy) if every Cauchy sequence of points in M has a limit that is also in M or,… … Wikipedia
Complete Boolean algebra — This article is about a type of mathematical structure. For complete sets of Boolean operators, see Functional completeness. In mathematics, a complete Boolean algebra is a Boolean algebra in which every subset has a supremum (least upper bound) … Wikipedia
Complete measure — In mathematics, a complete measure (or, more precisely, a complete measure space) is a measure space in which every subset of every null set is measurable (having measure zero). More formally, (X, Σ, μ) is complete if and only if… … Wikipedia
Complete category — In mathematics, a complete category is a category in which all small limits exist. That is, a category C is complete if every diagram F : J → C where J is small has a limit in C. Dually, a cocomplete category is one in which all small… … Wikipedia
complete — com|plete1 W1S2 [kəmˈpli:t] adj [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: complet, from Latin, past participle of complere to fill up , from com ( COM ) + plere to fill ] 1.) [usually before noun] used to emphasize that a quality or situation is as … Dictionary of contemporary English
Complete group — In mathematics, a group G is said to be complete if every automorphism of G is inner, and the group is a centerless group; that is, it has a trivial outer automorphism group and trivial center. Equivalently, a group is complete if the conjugation … Wikipedia
Complete algebraic variety — In mathematics, in particular in algebraic geometry, a complete algebraic variety is an algebraic variety X, such that for any variety Y the projection morphism X × Y → Y is a closed map, i.e. maps closed sets onto closed sets.[1] The most common … Wikipedia
Complete sequence — In mathematics, an integer sequence is called a complete sequence if every positive integer can be expressed as a sum of values in the sequence, using each value at most once. For example, the sequence of powers of two {1, 2, 4, 8, ...}, based on … Wikipedia
Complete mixing — In evolutionary game theory, complete mixing refers to an assumption about the type of interactions that occur between individual organisms. Interactions between individuals in a population attains complete mixing if and only if the probably… … Wikipedia