- Well-defined
In
mathematics , the term well-defined is used to specify that a certain concept or object (a function, a property, a relation, etc.) is defined in a mathematical or logical way using a set of baseaxiom s in an entirely unambiguous way and satisfies the properties it is required to satisfy. Usually definitions are stated unambiguously, and it is clear they satisfy the required properties. Sometimes however, it is economical to state a definition in terms of an arbitrary choice; one then has to check that the definition is independent of that choice. On other occasions, the required properties might not all be obvious; one then has to verify them. These issues commonly arise in the definition of functions.For instance, in
group theory , the term well-defined is often used when dealing withcoset s, where a function on a coset space is often defined by choosing a representative: it is then "as important" that we check that we get the same result regardless of which representative of the coset we choose as it is that we always get the same result when we perform arithmetical operations (e.g., whenever we add 2 and 3, we always get the answer 5)."f"("x"1)="f"("x"2) whenever "x"1~"x"2, then the definition makes sense, and "f" is well-defined on "X"/~. Although the distinction is often ignored, the function on "X"/~, having a different domain, should be viewed as a distinct map . In this view, one says that is well-defined if the diagram shown commutes. That is, that "f" factors through "π", where "π" is the canonical projection map "X" → "X"/~, so that .As an example, consider the equivalence relation between real numbers defined by "θ"1~"θ"2 if there is an integer "n" such that "θ"1-"θ"2 = 2π"n", where π (not italicized) denotes
Pi . Thequotient set "X"/~ may then be identified with a circle, as an equivalence class ["θ"] represents an angle. (In fact this is the coset space R/2πZ of the additive subgroup 2πZ of R.) Now if "f":R→R is the cosine function, then is well-defined, whereas if "f"("θ") = "θ" then is not well-defined.Two other issues of well-definition arise when defining a function "f" from a set "X" to a set "Y". First, "f" should actually be defined on all elements of "X". For example, the function "f"("x") = 1/"x" is not well-defined as a function from the real numbers to itself, as "f"("0") is not defined. Secondly, "f"("x") should be an element of "Y" for all "x"∈"X". For example, the function "f"("x") = "x"2 is not well-defined as a function from the real numbers to the positive real numbers, as "f"("0") is not positive.
A set is well-defined if any given object either is an element of the set, or is not an elementof the set.
ee also
*
existence
*uniqueness
*Defined and undefined
*Uniqueness quantification
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