unlesss
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Attributed to John Horton Conway. From unless, by analogy with the formation of iff from if.
Conjunction
[edit]unlesss
- (mathematics, logic) Precisely unless.
- 1990, James Glimm, The Legacy of John Von Neumann, American Mathematical Society, →ISBN, page 279,
- Partial Order: G ≥ H unlesss (unless and only unless) H ≥ some GR or some HL ≥ G.
- 1999, V. K. Balachandran, Topological Algebras[1], North-Holland, published 2000, →ISBN, pages 78–79:
- A subset is called absorbing if to each there is a real number such that for all with . Trivially the set is absorbing; on the other hand can never be absorbing (unlesss ).
- 2004, William Fraser, Susan Hirshberg, and David Wolfe, "The Structure of the Distributive Lattice of Games Born by Day n", in Integers: Electronic Journal of Combinatorial Number Theory 5(2) (2005), page 2,
- G ≥ H unlesss H ≥ GR or HL ≥ G for some GR ∈ GR or some HL ∈ HL. ¶ (Analogous to “iff”, the term “unlesss” means “unless and only unless”.)
- 1990, James Glimm, The Legacy of John Von Neumann, American Mathematical Society, →ISBN, page 279,