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In mathematics, a relation on a set is called connected or complete or total if it relates (or "compares") all pairs of elements of the set in one direction or the other while it is called strongly connected if it relates pairs of elements. As described in the terminology section below, the terminology for these properties is not uniform. This notion of "total" should not be confused with that of a total relation in the sense that for all x \in X there is a y \in X so that x \mathrel y (see serial relation). Connectedness features prominently in the definition of total orders: a total (or linear) order is a partial order in which any two elements are comparable; that is, the order relation is connected. Similarly, a strict partial order that is connected is a strict total order. A relation is a total order
if and only if In logic and related fields such as mathematics and philosophy, "if and only if" (often shortened as "iff") is paraphrased by the biconditional, a logical connective between statements. The biconditional is true in two cases, where either bo ...
it is both a partial order and strongly connected. A relation is a strict total order if, and only if, it is a strict partial order and just connected. A strict total order can never be strongly connected (except on an empty domain). Some authors do however use the term ''connected'' with a much looser meaning, which applies to precisely those orders whose comparability graphs are connected graphs. This applies for instance to the fences, of which none of the nontrivial examples are total orders.


Formal definition

A relation R on a set X is called when for all x, y \in X, \text x \neq y \text x \mathrel y \quad \text \quad y \mathrel x, or, equivalently, when for all x, y \in X, x \mathrel y \quad \text \quad y \mathrel x \quad \text \quad x = y. A relation with the property that for all x, y \in X, x \mathrel y \quad \text \quad y \mathrel x is called .


Terminology

The main use of the notion of connected relation is in the context of orders, where it is used to define total, or linear, orders. In this context, the property is often not specifically named. Rather, total orders are defined as partial orders in which any two elements are comparable. Thus, is used more generally for relations that are connected or strongly connected., p. 6 However, this notion of "total relation" must be distinguished from the property of being serial, which is also called total. Similarly, connected relations are sometimes called , although this, too, can lead to confusion: The universal relation is also called complete, and " complete" has several other meanings in
order theory Order theory is a branch of mathematics that investigates the intuitive notion of order using binary relations. It provides a formal framework for describing statements such as "this is less than that" or "this precedes that". This article intr ...
. Connected relations are also called or said to satisfy (although the more common definition of trichotomy is stronger in that of the three options x \mathrel y, y \mathrel x, x = y must hold). When the relations considered are not orders, being connected and being strongly connected are importantly different properties. Sources which define both then use pairs of terms such as and , and , and , and , or and , respectively, as alternative names for the notions of connected and strongly connected as defined above.


Characterizations

Let R be a homogeneous relation. The following are equivalent: * R is strongly connected; * U \subseteq R \cup R^\top; * \overline \subseteq R^\top; * \overline is asymmetric, where U is the universal relation and R^\top is the converse relation of R. The following are equivalent: * R is connected; * \overline \subseteq R \cup R^\top; * \overline \subseteq R^\top \cup I; * \overline is antisymmetric, where \overline is the complementary relation of the identity relation I and R^\top is the converse relation of R. Introducing progressions, Russell invoked the axiom of connection:


Properties

* The relationDefined formally by v E w if a graph edge leads from vertex v to vertex w E of a
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graph G is always a connected relation on the set of Gs vertices. * If a strongly connected relation is symmetric, it is the universal relation. * A relation is strongly connected if, and only if, it is connected and reflexive.For the direction, both properties follow trivially. — For the direction: when x \neq y, then x\mathrely \lor y\mathrelx follows from connectedness; when x = y, x \mathrel y follows from reflexivity. * A connected relation on a set X cannot be antitransitive, provided X has at least 4 elements. Lemma 8.2, p.8. On a 3-element set \, for example, the relation \ has both properties. * If R is a connected relation on X, then all, or all but one, elements of X are in the range of R.If x, y \in X \setminus \operatorname(R), then x \mathrel y and y \mathrel x are impossible, so x = y follows from connectedness. Similarly, all, or all but one, elements of X are in the domain of R.


Notes

;Proofs


References

{{Order theory Properties of binary relations