Euler diagram

news/2024/4/29 17:44:08/文章来源:https://blog.csdn.net/qq_66485519/article/details/128043451

An Euler diagram (/ˈɔɪlər/, OY-lər) is a diagrammatic means of representing sets and their relationships. They are particularly useful for explaining complex hierarchies and overlapping definitions. They are similar to another set diagramming technique, Venn diagrams. Unlike Venn diagrams, which show all possible relations between different sets, the Euler diagram shows only relevant relationships.

The first use of “Eulerian circles” is commonly attributed to Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler (1707–1783). In the United States, both Venn and Euler diagrams were incorporated as part of instruction in set theory as part of the new math movement of the 1960s. Since then, they have also been adopted by other curriculum fields such as reading[1] as well as organizations and businesses.

Euler diagrams consist of simple closed shapes in a two-dimensional plane that each depict a set or category. How or whether these shapes overlap demonstrates the relationships between the sets. Each curve divides the plane into two regions or “zones”: the interior, which symbolically represents the elements of the set, and the exterior, which represents all elements that are not members of the set. Curves that do not overlap represent disjoint sets, which have no elements in common. Two curves that overlap represent sets that intersect, that have common elements; the zone inside both curves represents the set of elements common to both sets (the intersection of the sets). A curve completely within the interior of another is a subset of it.

Venn diagrams are a more restrictive form of Euler diagrams. A Venn diagram must contain all 2n logically possible zones of overlap between its n curves, representing all combinations of inclusion/exclusion of its constituent sets. Regions not part of the set are indicated by coloring them black, in contrast to Euler diagrams, where membership in the set is indicated by overlap as well as color.

在这里插入图片描述

An Euler diagram illustrating that the set of “animals with four legs” is a subset of “animals”, but the set of “minerals” is disjoint (has no members in common) with “animals”

在这里插入图片描述

An Euler diagram showing the relationships between different Solar System objects

Contents

  • 1 History
  • 2 Relation between Euler and Venn diagrams
    • 2.1 Example: Euler- to Venn-diagram and Karnaugh map
  • 3 Gallery
  • 4 See also

1 History

As shown in the illustration to the right, Sir William Hamilton in his posthumously published Lectures on Metaphysics and Logic (1858–60) erroneously asserts that the original use of circles to “sensualize … the abstractions of Logic” (p. 180) was not Leonhard Paul Euler (1707–1783) but rather Christian Weise (1642–1708) in his Nucleus Logicae Weisianae that appeared in 1712 posthumously, however, the latter book was actually written by Johann Christian Lange rather than Weise.[2][3] He references Euler’s Letters to a German Princess [Partie II, Lettre XXXV, February 17, 1791, ed. Cournot (1842), pp. 412–417. – ED.][nb 1]

In Hamilton’s illustration the four categorical propositions that can occur in a syllogism as symbolized by the drawings A, E, I and O are:[4]

A: The Universal Affirmative, Example: “All metals are elements”.
E: The Universal Negative, Example: “No metals are compound substances”.
I: The Particular Affirmative, Example: “Some metals are brittle”.
O: The Particular Negative, Example: “Some metals are not brittle”.
In his 1881 Symbolic Logic Chapter V “Diagrammatic Representation”, John Venn (1834–1923) comments on the remarkable prevalence of the Euler diagram:

“…of the first sixty logical treatises, published during the last century or so, which were consulted for this purpose:-somewhat at random, as they happened to be most accessible :-it appeared that thirty four appealed to the aid of diagrams, nearly all of these making use of the Eulerian Scheme.” (Footnote 1 page 100)

But nevertheless, he contended, “the inapplicability of this scheme for the purposes of a really general Logic” (page 100) and on page 101 observed that, “It fits in but badly even with the four propositions of the common Logic to which it is normally applied.” Venn ends his chapter with the observation illustrated in the examples below—that their use is based on practice and intuition, not on a strict algorithmic practice:

“In fact … those diagrams not only do not fit in with the ordinary scheme of propositions which they are employed to illustrate, but do not seem to have any recognized scheme of propositions to which they could be consistently affiliated.” (pp. 124–125)
Finally, in his Chapter XX HISTORIC NOTES Venn gets to a crucial criticism (italicized in the quote below); observe in Hamilton’s illustration that the O (Particular Negative) and I (Particular Affirmative) are simply rotated:

“We now come to Euler’s well-known circles which were first described in his Lettres a une Princesse d’Allemagne (Letters 102–105). The weak point about these consists in the fact that they only illustrate in strictness the actual relations of classes to one another, rather than the imperfect knowledge of these relations which we may possess, or wish to convey, by means of the proposition. Accordingly they will not fit in with the propositions of common logic, but demand the constitution of a new group of appropriate elementary propositions… This defect must have been noticed from the first in the case of the particular affirmative and negative, for the same diagram is commonly employed to stand for them both, which it does indifferently well”. (italics added: page 424)
(Sandifer 2003 reports that Euler makes such observations too; Euler reports that his figure 45 (a simple intersection of two circles) has 4 different interpretations). Whatever the case, armed with these observations and criticisms, Venn then demonstrates (pp. 100–125) how he derived what has become known as his Venn diagrams from the “…old-fashioned Euler diagrams.” In particular he gives an example, shown on the left.

By 1914, Louis Couturat (1868–1914) had labeled the terms as shown on the drawing on the right. Moreover, he had labeled the exterior region (shown as a’b’c’) as well. He succinctly explains how to use the diagram – one must strike out the regions that are to vanish:

“VENN’S method is translated in geometrical diagrams which represent all the constituents, so that, in order to obtain the result, we need only strike out (by shading) those which are made to vanish by the data of the problem.” (italics added p. 73)
Given the Venn’s assignments, then, the unshaded areas inside the circles can be summed to yield the following equation for Venn’s example:

“No Y is Z and ALL X is Y: therefore No X is Z” has the equation x’yz’ + xyz’ + x’y’z for the unshaded area inside the circles (but this is not entirely correct; see the next paragraph).
In Venn the 0th term, x’y’z’, i.e. the background surrounding the circles, does not appear. Nowhere is it discussed or labeled, but Couturat corrects this in his drawing. The correct equation must include this unshaded area shown in boldface:

“No Y is Z and ALL X is Y: therefore No X is Z” has the equation x’yz’ + xyz’ + x’y’z + x’y’z’ .
In modern usage the Venn diagram includes a “box” that surrounds all the circles; this is called the universe of discourse or the domain of discourse.

Couturat now observes that, in a direct algorithmic (formal, systematic) manner, one cannot derive reduced Boolean equations, nor does it show how to arrive at the conclusion “No X is Z”. Couturat concluded that the process “has … serious inconveniences as a method for solving logical problems”:

“It does not show how the data are exhibited by canceling certain constituents, nor does it show how to combine the remaining constituents so as to obtain the consequences sought. In short, it serves only to exhibit one single step in the argument, namely the equation of the problem; it dispenses neither with the previous steps, i. e., “throwing of the problem into an equation” and the transformation of the premises, nor with the subsequent steps, i. e., the combinations that lead to the various consequences. Hence it is of very little use, inasmuch as the constituents can be represented by algebraic symbols quite as well as by plane regions, and are much easier to deal with in this form.”(p. 75)
Thus the matter would rest until 1952 when Maurice Karnaugh (1924– ) would adapt and expand a method proposed by Edward W. Veitch; this work would rely on the truth table method precisely defined in Emil Post’s 1921 PhD thesis “Introduction to a general theory of elementary propositions” and the application of propositional logic to switching logic by (among others) Claude Shannon, George Stibitz, and Alan Turing.[nb 2] For example, in chapter “Boolean Algebra”, Hill and Peterson (1968, 1964) present sections 4.5ff “Set Theory as an Example of Boolean Algebra”, and in it they present the Venn diagram with shading and all. They give examples of Venn diagrams to solve example switching-circuit problems, but end up with this statement:

“For more than three variables, the basic illustrative form of the Venn diagram is inadequate. Extensions are possible, however, the most convenient of which is the Karnaugh map, to be discussed in Chapter 6.” (p. 64)
In Chapter 6, section 6.4 “Karnaugh Map Representation of Boolean Functions” they begin with:

“The Karnaugh map1 [1Karnaugh 1953] is one of the most powerful tools in the repertory of the logic designer. … A Karnaugh map may be regarded either as a pictorial form of a truth table or as an extension of the Venn diagram.” (pp. 103–104)
The history of Karnaugh’s development of his “chart” or “map” method is obscure. Karnaugh in his 1953 referenced Veitch 1951, Veitch referenced Claude E. Shannon 1938 (essentially Shannon’s Master’s thesis at M.I.T.), and Shannon in turn referenced, among other authors of logic texts, Couturat 1914. In Veitch’s method the variables are arranged in a rectangle or square; as described in Karnaugh map, Karnaugh in his method changed the order of the variables to correspond to what has become known as (the vertices of) a hypercube.

在这里插入图片描述

A page from Hamilton’s Lectures on Logic. The symbolism A, E, I, and O refers to the categorical statements that can occur in a syllogism. The small text to the left erroneously states: “The first employment of circular diagrams in logic improperly ascribed to Euler. To be found in Christian Weise”, a book actually written by Johann Christian Lange.[2][3]

在这里插入图片描述

On the right is page 74 from Couturat 1914 wherein he labels the 8 regions of the Venn diagram. The modern name for these “regions” is minterms. These are shown on the left with the variables x, y and z per Venn’s drawing. The symbolism is as follows: logical AND ( & ) is represented by arithmetic multiplication, and the logical NOT ( ~ ) is represented by " ’ " after the variable, e.g. the region x’y’z is read as “NOT x AND NOT y AND z” i.e. ~x & ~y & z.

在这里插入图片描述

Composite of two pages 115–116 from Venn 1881 showing his example of how to convert a syllogism of three parts into his type of diagram. Venn calls the circles “Eulerian circles” (cf Sandifer 2003, Venn 1881:114 etc) in the “Eulerian scheme” (Venn 1881:100) of “old-fashioned Eulerian diagrams” (Venn 1881:113).

在这里插入图片描述

Both the Veitch diagram and Karnaugh map show all the minterms, but the Veitch is not particularly useful for reduction of formulas. Observe the strong resemblance between the Venn and Karnaugh diagrams; the colors and the variables x, y, and z are per Venn’s example.

2 Relation between Euler and Venn diagrams

Venn diagrams are a more restrictive form of Euler diagrams. A Venn diagram must contain all 2n logically possible zones of overlap between its n curves, representing all combinations of inclusion/exclusion of its constituent sets. Regions not part of the set are indicated by coloring them black, in contrast to Euler diagrams, where membership in the set is indicated by overlap as well as color. When the number of sets grows beyond 3 a Venn diagram becomes visually complex, especially compared to the corresponding Euler diagram. The difference between Euler and Venn diagrams can be seen in the following example. Take the three sets:

{\displaystyle A={1,,2,,5}}A={1,,2,,5}
{\displaystyle B={1,,6}}B={1,,6}
{\displaystyle C={4,,7}}C={4,,7}
The Euler and the Venn diagrams of those sets are:

在这里插入图片描述

Euler diagram

在这里插入图片描述

Venn diagram

In a logical setting, one can use model-theoretic semantics to interpret Euler diagrams, within a universe of discourse. In the examples below, the Euler diagram depicts that the sets Animal and Mineral are disjoint since the corresponding curves are disjoint, and also that the set Four Legs is a subset of the set of Animals. The Venn diagram, which uses the same categories of Animal, Mineral, and Four Legs, does not encapsulate these relationships. Traditionally the emptiness of a set in Venn diagrams is depicted by shading in the region. Euler diagrams represent emptiness either by shading or by the absence of a region.

Often a set of well-formedness conditions are imposed; these are topological or geometric constraints imposed on the structure of the diagram. For example, connectedness of zones might be enforced, or concurrency of curves or multiple points might be banned, as might tangential intersection of curves. In the adjacent diagram, examples of small Venn diagrams are transformed into Euler diagrams by sequences of transformations; some of the intermediate diagrams have concurrency of curves. However, this sort of transformation of a Venn diagram with shading into an Euler diagram without shading is not always possible. There are examples of Euler diagrams with 9 sets that are not drawable using simple closed curves without the creation of unwanted zones since they would have to have non-planar dual graphs.

在这里插入图片描述

Examples of small Venn diagrams (on left) with shaded regions representing empty sets, showing how they can be easily transformed into equivalent Euler diagrams (right)

2.1 Example: Euler- to Venn-diagram and Karnaugh map

This example shows the Euler and Venn diagrams and Karnaugh map deriving and verifying the deduction “No Xs are Zs”. In the illustration and table the following logical symbols are used:

1 can be read as “true”, 0 as “false”
for NOT and abbreviated to ’ when illustrating the minterms e.g. x’ =defined NOT x,
  • for Boolean OR (from Boolean algebra: 0 + 0 = 0, 0 + 1 = 1 + 0 = 1, 1 + 1 = 1)
    & (logical AND) between propositions; in the minterms AND is omitted in a manner similar to arithmetic multiplication: e.g. x’y’z =defined ~x & ~y & z (From Boolean algebra: 0·0 = 0, 0·1 = 1·0 = 0, 1·1 = 1, where “·” is shown for clarity)
    → (logical IMPLICATION): read as IF … THEN …, or " IMPLIES ", P → Q = defined NOT P OR Q

在这里插入图片描述

Before it can be presented in a Venn diagram or Karnaugh Map, the Euler diagram’s syllogism “No Y is Z, All X is Y” must first be reworded into the more formal language of the propositional calculus: " ‘It is not the case that: Y AND Z’ AND ‘If an X then a Y’ ". Once the propositions are reduced to symbols and a propositional formula ( ~(y & z) & (x → y) ), one can construct the formula’s truth table; from this table the Venn and/or the Karnaugh map are readily produced. By use of the adjacency of "1"s in the Karnaugh map (indicated by the grey ovals around terms 0 and 1 and around terms 2 and 6) one can “reduce” the example’s Boolean equation i.e. (x’y’z’ + x’y’z) + (x’yz’ + xyz’) to just two terms: x’y’ + yz’. But the means for deducing the notion that “No X is Z”, and just how the reduction relates to this deduction, is not forthcoming from this example.

Given a proposed conclusion such as “No X is a Z”, one can test whether or not it is a correct deduction by use of a truth table. The easiest method is put the starting formula on the left (abbreviate it as P) and put the (possible) deduction on the right (abbreviate it as Q) and connect the two with logical implication i.e. P → Q, read as IF P THEN Q. If the evaluation of the truth table produces all 1s under the implication-sign (→, the so-called major connective) then P → Q is a tautology. Given this fact, one can “detach” the formula on the right (abbreviated as Q) in the manner described below the truth table.

Given the example above, the formula for the Euler and Venn diagrams is:

“No Ys are Zs” and “All Xs are Ys”: ( ~(y & z) & (x → y) ) =defined P
And the proposed deduction is:

“No Xs are Zs”: ( ~ (x & z) ) =defined Q
So now the formula to be evaluated can be abbreviated to:

( ~(y & z) & (x → y) ) → ( ~ (x & z) ): P → Q
IF ( “No Ys are Zs” and “All Xs are Ys” ) THEN ( “No Xs are Zs” )

在这里插入图片描述
At this point the above implication P → Q (i.e. ~(y & z) & (x → y) ) → ~(x & z) ) is still a formula, and the deduction – the “detachment” of Q out of P → Q – has not occurred. But given the demonstration that P → Q is tautology, the stage is now set for the use of the procedure of modus ponens to “detach” Q: “No Xs are Zs” and dispense with the terms on the left.[nb 3]

Modus ponens (or “the fundamental rule of inference”[5]) is often written as follows: The two terms on the left, P → Q and P, are called premises (by convention linked by a comma), the symbol ⊢ means “yields” (in the sense of logical deduction), and the term on the right is called the conclusion:

P → Q, P ⊢ Q
For the modus ponens to succeed, both premises P → Q and P must be true. Because, as demonstrated above the premise P → Q is a tautology, “truth” is always the case no matter how x, y and z are valued, but “truth” is only the case for P in those circumstances when P evaluates as “true” (e.g. rows 0 OR 1 OR 2 OR 6: x’y’z’ + x’y’z + x’yz’ + xyz’ = x’y’ + yz’).[nb 4]

P → Q , P ⊢ Q
i.e.: ( ~(y & z) & (x → y) ) → ( ~ (x & z) ) , ( ~(y & z) & (x → y) ) ⊢ ( ~ (x & z) )
i.e.: IF “No Ys are Zs” and “All Xs are Ys” THEN “No Xs are Zs”, “No Ys are Zs” and “All Xs are Ys” ⊢ “No Xs are Zs”
One is now free to “detach” the conclusion “No Xs are Zs”, perhaps to use it in a subsequent deduction (or as a topic of conversation).

The use of tautological implication means that other possible deductions exist besides “No Xs are Zs”; the criterion for a successful deduction is that the 1s under the sub-major connective on the right include all the 1s under the sub-major connective on the left (the major connective being the implication that results in the tautology). For example, in the truth table, on the right side of the implication (→, the major connective symbol) the bold-face column under the sub-major connective symbol " ~ " has the all the same 1s that appear in the bold-faced column under the left-side sub-major connective & (rows 0, 1, 2 and 6), plus two more (rows 3 and 4).

3 Gallery

在这里插入图片描述

A Venn diagram shows all possible intersections.

在这里插入图片描述

Euler diagram visualizing a real situation, the relationships between various supranational European organizations. (clickable version)

在这里插入图片描述

Humorous diagram comparing Euler and Venn diagrams.

在这里插入图片描述

Euler diagram of types of triangles, using the definition that isosceles triangles have at least (rather than exactly) 2 equal sides.

在这里插入图片描述

Euler diagram of terminology of the British Isles.

在这里插入图片描述

The 22 (of 256) essentially different Venn diagrams with 3 circles (top) and their corresponding Euler diagrams (bottom)
Some of the Euler diagrams are not typical, and some are even equivalent to Venn diagrams. Areas are shaded to indicate that they contain no elements.

在这里插入图片描述

Henri Milne -Edwards’s (1844) diagram of relationships of vertebrate animals, illustrated as a series of nested sets.

在这里插入图片描述

A clickable Euler diagram[file] showing the relationships between various multinational European organisations and agreements.

4 See also

Rainbow box
Spider diagram – an extension of Euler diagrams adding existence to contour intersections.
Venn diagram

本文来自互联网用户投稿,该文观点仅代表作者本人,不代表本站立场。本站仅提供信息存储空间服务,不拥有所有权,不承担相关法律责任。如若转载,请注明出处:http://www.luyixian.cn/news_show_36763.aspx

如若内容造成侵权/违法违规/事实不符,请联系dt猫网进行投诉反馈email:809451989@qq.com,一经查实,立即删除!

相关文章

TrustSVD算法进行基于矩阵分解的商品推荐 代码+数据(可作为毕设)

案例简介 (1)方法概述: 本教程包含如下内容: 从原始的数据文件中加载数据,进行训练集和测试集的切分,并对测试集进行负采样。 对数据分batch, 利用用户历史点击记录进行模型训练 结果展示 数据集:https://download.csdn.net/download/qq_38735017/87154848 (2)宏观流程图 …

物联网安全年报暴露情况分析

暴露情况分析 在去年研究的基础上,我们今年对 UPnP 协议的暴露情况进行持续关注。如无特殊说明,本章中的 统计数据基于全球单轮次的测绘(2019 年 10 月)。本节我们将对 SSDP 与 SOAP服务的暴露情况进行 分析,4.4.2 节…

Flutter 实现局部刷新 StreamBuilder 实例详解

一、前言 在flutter项目中,页面内直接调用setState方法会使得页面重新执行build方法,导致内部组件被全量刷新,造成不必要的性能消耗。出于性能和用户体验方面的考虑我们经常会使用局部刷新代替全量刷新进行页面更新的操作。包括Provider、Va…

Vuex 笔记

文章目录1 Vuex 简介2 Vuex 用法2.1 安装 vuex2.2 修改 main.js,2.3 使用 mutation 改变 Store:2.4 带参数的 mutations:2.5 使用 getters 读取 store 数据2.6 使用 actions 执行异步代码2.7 总结2.8 使用 mapper 简化代码2.9 使用模块组织 store2.10 模块名字空间2…

如何将草料二维码收集到的表单信息同步至腾讯文档

在进行工业巡检场景如消防栓检查时,需要到达巡检地点后,扫描草料二维码,然后填写巡检的结果。事后,还需要有一个工作人员将草料二维码中的信息手动复制粘贴至腾讯文档中。那么能不能将我们信息填写后,自动就汇总至腾讯…

微客云升级会员制度

会员制度 会员制度是一种人与人或组织与组织之间进行沟通的媒介,它是由某个组织发起并在该组织的管理运作下,吸引客户自愿加入,目的是定期与会员联系,为他们提供具有较高感知价值的利益包。 Part 1 会员制度 建立长期稳定的客…

CameraMetadata 知识学习整理

一、涉及的相关代码路径 system/media/camera/src/camera_metadata.c // metadata的核心内容,包含metadata内存分配,扩容规则,update, find等 system/media/camera/src/camera_metadata_tag_info.c // 所有android原生tag的在内存里面sect…

GitHub 下载量过百万,阿里 P8 秘密分享的「亿级并发系统设计」

随着互联网的不断发展,CPU 硬件的核心数也在不断进步,并发编程越来越普及,但是并发编程并不像其他业务那样直接了当。在编写并发程序时,我们常常都会出现各种漏洞,这些问题往往都突然出现,然后又迅速消失&a…

龙格-库塔法(Runge-Kutta methods)

非线性的常微分方程通常是难以求出解析解的,只能通过多次迭代求近似的数值解。 龙格-库塔法(Runge-Kutta methods)是用于非线性常微分方程的解的重要的一类隐式或显式迭代法。简写做RK法。 对于任意的Yf(X),假设某点(Xi,Yi)的斜…

阿里云安装软件:jdk11

命令下载 1. 安装准备 检查系统jdk版本 java -version检查jdk自带安装包 rpm -qa | grep java卸载jdk yum -y remove tzdata-java.noarch如果有就卸载,卸载的包名通过(rpm -qa | grep java)获取,包名要全部输入 rpm -e --nodeps …

计算机网络——TCP连接管理

本文将会介绍如何建立和拆除一条TCP连接,TCP的连接会显著的增加人们感受到的时延(尤其是在Web冲浪时)。同时一些常见的网络攻击SYN洪范攻击利用了TCP连接管理的弱点。 假定运行一台主机(客户)上的一个进程想和另一台主…

流程编排、如此简单-通用流程编排组件JDEasyFlow介绍

作者:李玉亮 JDEasyFlow是企业金融研发部自研的通用流程编排技术组件,适用于服务编排、工作流、审批流等场景,该组件已开源(https://github.com/JDEasyFlow/jd-easyflow),目前在部门的内部业务系统和科技输出系统中广泛应用&…

通过PreparedStatement预防SQL注入

通过PreparedStatement预防SQL注入 简介:本文只讲PreparedStatement预防SQL注入的写法,大家学会就好。 推荐学习路线:JDBC数据库的连接->Connection(数据库连接对象)->Statement->ResultSet->通过Prepare…

Spring Boot 简介及快速搭建

Spring Boot 简介及快速搭建 springboot的优点: –快速构建一个独立的 Spring 应用程序 ; –嵌入的 Tomcat 、 Jetty 或者 Undertow,无须部署 WAR 文件; –提供starter POMs来简化Maven配置和减少版本冲突所带来的问题&#xff1…

【云原生 | Kubernetes 系列】--Gitops持续交付 Argo Rollouts Analysis

1. Argo Rollouts 由一个控制器和一组CRD组成,可为K8s提供高级部署功能 - blue-green - canary - canary analysis 结合外部指标系统金丝雀 - experimentation 实验性的结果 - progressive delivery 渐进式交付,精准管控外部流量策略,不用关心后端部署机制支持Ingress Contro…

深度学习 Day 20——优化器对比实验

深度学习 Day 20——优化器对比实验 文章目录深度学习 Day 20——优化器对比实验一、前言二、我的环境三、前期工作1、设置GPU2、导入数据3、配置数据集4、数据可视化三、构建模型四、训练模型五、模型评估1、Accuracy与Loss图2、评估模型六、最后我想说一、前言 🍨…

2022 谷歌出海创业加速器展示日: 见证入营企业成长收获

经历三个月的沉淀,迎来了展示日的大放异彩。10 家入营企业的路演分享,带来诸多启发 ——企业出海有什么挑战和难点?加入谷歌出海创业加速器,团队有哪些收获?三个月的培训和交流,带来了怎样的感受&#xff1…

【车间调度】遗传算法求解车间调度问题(含甘特图)【含Matlab源码 2216期】

⛄一、车间调度简介 1 车间调度定义 车间调度是指根据产品制造的合理需求分配加工车间顺序,从而达到合理利用产品制造资源、提高企业经济效益的目的。车间调度问题从数学上可以描述为有n个待加工的零件要在m台机器上加工。问题需要满足的条件包括每个零件的各道工序…

arduino 复习题

名词解释 中断 计算机运行过程中,出现某些意外情况需主机干预时,机器能自动停止正在运行的程序并转入处理新情况的程序,处理完毕后又返回原被暂停的程序继续运行 中断服务程序 用于 CPU 处理中断的程序 中断源 引起中断的原因,或…

柯桥成人英语培训机构哪家好,新陈代谢到底是什么?

新陈代谢到底是什么? Metabolism is a combination of biochemical processes that your body uses to convert food into energy. These metabolic processes include breathing, eating and digesting food, the delivery of nutrients to your cells through the blood, th…