Posts Tagged ‘smaller’
Tuesday, December 29th, 2009
Overview of the Trichotomy Property
Description
A detailed tutorial on the trichotomy property. Step by step tutorial including several examples of the trichotomy property for reference.
Overview
The trichotomy property is one of the ordering properties of natural numbers. It tells us what order you need to put the natural numbers in – in other words, it tells you the placement of each element of the set of natural numbers. The trichotomy property states that is there are two natural numbers m and n, that m must be either less than n, equal to n, or greater than n. The smaller number is to be placed first, with the larger number after it. If the numbers are equal, then only one number needs to be included as part of the set.
Tags: arithmetic, element, equal, greater, inequality, larger, less, natural, number, order, placement, property, set, smaller, than, trichotomy
Posted in Arithmetic | No Comments »
Friday, November 20th, 2009
Definition of an Outlier
Description
A detailed tutorial on the definition of an outlier. Step by step tutorial including several examples of definitions of outliers for reference.
Overview
An outlier is a type of observation of statistical data. It is usually very far away from the other values in the data set, hence the name. Usually it is a number that is much smaller than the other numbers, although it could be much larger than the other numbers as well. Outliers have an equal chance of occuring in any random observation, but they are still rare. Typically when an outlier is found it means there is some sort of mistake, usually a measurement error.
Tags: chance, data, elements, equal, error, larger, measurement, mistake, numbers, observation, outlier, random, set, smaller, statistical, statistics, values
Posted in Statistics | No Comments »
Friday, November 13th, 2009
An Overview of Composite Figures
Description
A detailed tutorial on what composite figures are. Step by step tutorial including several examples of how to identify composite figures for reference.
Overview
A composite figure is any figure that can be split into more than one shape. Hardly any regular shapes are considered to be composite shapes. The only one is a regular trapezoid – it can be split into three shapes, two triangles and a rectangle. You could technically consider a rectangle to be a composite figure – you can split it into squares or smaller rectangles – but since it doesn’t need to be split into different shapes to solve for area, then it is not considered a composite figure.
Tags: 2D, area, composite, different, figure, flat, geometrical, Geometry, rectangle, regular, shape, smaller, split, square, trapezoid, triangle, volume
Posted in Geometry | No Comments »