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Operation (mathematics)
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Operation (mathematics) : ウィキペディア英語版
Operation (mathematics)

In mathematics, an operation is a calculation from zero or more input values (called "operands") to an output value.
(''Operations, as defined here, should not be confused with operators on vector spaces nor arithmetic operations on numbers.'')
==Types of operation==
There are two common types of operations: unary and binary. Unary operations involve only one value, such as negation and trigonometric functions. Binary operations, on the other hand, take two values, and include addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and exponentiation.
Operations can involve mathematical objects other than numbers. The logical values ''true'' and ''false'' can be combined using logic operations, such as ''and'', ''or,'' and ''not''. Vectors can be added and subtracted. Rotations can be combined using the function composition operation, performing the first rotation and then the second. Operations on sets include the binary operations ''union'' and ''intersection'' and the unary operation of ''complementation''. Operations on functions include composition and convolution.
Operations may not be defined for every possible value. For example, in the real numbers one cannot divide by zero or take square roots of negative numbers. The values for which an operation is defined form a set called its ''domain''. The set which contains the values produced is called the ''codomain'', but the set of actual values attained by the operation is its ''range''. For example, in the real numbers, the squaring operation only produces non-negative numbers; the codomain is the set of real numbers but the range is the non-negative numbers.
Operations can involve dissimilar objects. A vector can be multiplied by a scalar to form another vector. And the inner product operation on two vectors produces a scalar. An operation may or may not have certain properties, for example it may be associative, commutative, anticommutative, idempotent, and so on.
The values combined are called ''operands'', ''arguments'', or ''inputs'', and the value produced is called the ''value'', ''result'', or ''output''. Operations can have fewer or more than two inputs.
An operation is like an operator, but the point of view is different. For instance, one often speaks of "the operation of addition" or "addition operation" when focusing on the operands and result, but one says "addition operator" (rarely "operator of addition") when focusing on the process, or from the more abstract viewpoint, the function +: S×S → S.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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