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![]() ![]() All definitions tacitly require the homogeneous relation be transitive: for all if and then |
In mathematics, specifically order theory, the join of a subset of a partially ordered set is the supremum (least upper bound) of denoted and similarly, the meet of is the infimum (greatest lower bound), denoted In general, the join and meet of a subset of a partially ordered set need not exist. Join and meet are dual to one another with respect to order inversion.
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A partially ordered set in which all pairs have a join is a join-semilattice. Dually, a partially ordered set in which all pairs have a meet is a meet-semilattice. A partially ordered set that is both a join-semilattice and a meet-semilattice is a lattice. A lattice in which every subset, not just every pair, possesses a meet and a join is a complete lattice. It is also possible to define a partial lattice, in which not all pairs have a meet or join but the operations (when defined) satisfy certain axioms.
The join/meet of a subset of a totally ordered set is simply the maximal/minimal element of that subset, if such an element exists.
If a subset of a partially ordered set is also an (upward) directed set, then its join (if it exists) is called a directed join or directed supremum. Dually, if is a downward directed set, then its meet (if it exists) is a directed meet or directed infimum.
Definitions
Partial order approach
Let be a set with a partial order
and let
An element
of
is called the meet (or greatest lower bound or infimum) of
and is denoted by
if the following two conditions are satisfied:
(that is,
is a lower bound of
).
- For any
if
then
(that is,
is greater than or equal to any other lower bound of
).
The meet need not exist, either since the pair has no lower bound at all, or since none of the lower bounds is greater than all the others. However, if there is a meet of then it is unique, since if both
are greatest lower bounds of
then
and thus
If not all pairs of elements from
have a meet, then the meet can still be seen as a partial binary operation on
If the meet does exist then it is denoted If all pairs of elements from
have a meet, then the meet is a binary operation on
and it is easy to see that this operation fulfills the following three conditions: For any elements
(commutativity),
(associativity), and
(idempotency).
Joins are defined dually with the join of if it exists, denoted by
An element
of
is the join (or least upper bound or supremum) of
in
if the following two conditions are satisfied:
(that is,
is an upper bound of
).
- For any
if
then
(that is,
is less than or equal to any other upper bound of
).
Universal algebra approach
By definition, a binary operation on a set
is a meet if it satisfies the three conditions a, b, and c. The pair
is then a meet-semilattice. Moreover, we then may define a binary relation
on A, by stating that
if and only if
In fact, this relation is a partial order on
Indeed, for any elements
since
by c;
- if
then
by a; and
- if
then
since then
by b.
Both meets and joins equally satisfy this definition: a couple of associated meet and join operations yield partial orders which are the reverse of each other. When choosing one of these orders as the main ones, one also fixes which operation is considered a meet (the one giving the same order) and which is considered a join (the other one).
Equivalence of approaches
If is a partially ordered set, such that each pair of elements in
has a meet, then indeed
if and only if
since in the latter case indeed
is a lower bound of
and since
is the greatest lower bound if and only if it is a lower bound. Thus, the partial order defined by the meet in the universal algebra approach coincides with the original partial order.
Conversely, if is a meet-semilattice, and the partial order
is defined as in the universal algebra approach, and
for some elements
then
is the greatest lower bound of
with respect to
since
and therefore
Similarly,
and if
is another lower bound of
then
whence
Thus, there is a meet defined by the partial order defined by the original meet, and the two meets coincide.
In other words, the two approaches yield essentially equivalent concepts, a set equipped with both a binary relation and a binary operation, such that each one of these structures determines the other, and fulfill the conditions for partial orders or meets, respectively.
Meets of general subsets
If is a meet-semilattice, then the meet may be extended to a well-defined meet of any non-empty finite set, by the technique described in iterated binary operations. Alternatively, if the meet defines or is defined by a partial order, some subsets of
indeed have infima with respect to this, and it is reasonable to consider such an infimum as the meet of the subset. For non-empty finite subsets, the two approaches yield the same result, and so either may be taken as a definition of meet. In the case where each subset of
has a meet, in fact
is a complete lattice; for details, see completeness (order theory).
Examples
If some power set is partially ordered in the usual way (by
) then joins are unions and meets are intersections; in symbols,
(where the similarity of these symbols may be used as a mnemonic for remembering that
denotes the join/supremum and
denotes the meet/infimum).
More generally, suppose that is a family of subsets of some set
that is partially ordered by
If
is closed under arbitrary unions and arbitrary intersections and if
belong to
then
But if
is not closed under unions then
exists in
if and only if there exists a unique
-smallest
such that
For example, if
then
whereas if
then
does not exist because the sets
are the only upper bounds of
in
that could possibly be the least upper bound
but
and
If
then
does not exist because there is no upper bound of
in
See also
- Locally convex vector lattice
Notes
- It can be immediately determined that supremums and infimums in this canonical, simple example
are
respectively. The similarity of the symbol
to
and of
to
may thus be used as a mnemonic for remembering that in the most general setting,
denotes the supremum (because a supremum is a bound from above, just like
is "above"
and
) while
denotes the infimum (because an infimum is a bound from below, just like
is "below"
and
). This can also be used to remember whether meets/joins are denoted by
or by
Intuition suggests that "join"ing two sets together should produce their union
which looks similar to
so "join" must be denoted by
Similarly, two sets should "meet" at their intersection
which looks similar to
so "meet" must be denoted by
References
- Davey, B.A.; Priestley, H.A. (2002). Introduction to Lattices and Order (2nd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-78451-4. Zbl 1002.06001.
- Vickers, Steven (1989). Topology via Logic. Cambridge Tracts in Theoretic Computer Science. Vol. 5. ISBN 0-521-36062-5. Zbl 0668.54001.
Transitive binary relations vteSymmetricAntisymmetricConnectedWell foundedHas joinsHas meetsReflexiveIrreflexiveAsymmetricTotal SemiconnexAnti reflexiveEquivalence relationY Y Preorder Quasiorder Y Partial order Y Y Total preorder Y Y Total order YY Y Prewellordering YY Y Well quasi ordering Y Y Well ordering YYY Y Lattice Y YYY Join semilattice Y Y Y Meet semilattice Y YY Strict partial order Y YYStrict weak order Y YYStrict total order YY YYSymmetricAntisymmetricConnectedWell foundedHas joinsHas meetsReflexiveIrreflexiveAsymmetricDefinitions for all a b displaystyle a b and S displaystyle S neq varnothing aRb bRa displaystyle begin aligned amp aRb Rightarrow amp bRa end aligned aRb and bRa a b displaystyle begin aligned aRb text and amp bRa Rightarrow a amp b end aligned a b aRb or bRa displaystyle begin aligned a neq amp b Rightarrow aRb text or amp bRa end aligned minSexists displaystyle begin aligned min S text exists end aligned a bexists displaystyle begin aligned a vee b text exists end aligned a bexists displaystyle begin aligned a wedge b text exists end aligned aRa displaystyle aRa not aRa displaystyle text not aRa aRb not bRa displaystyle begin aligned aRb Rightarrow text not bRa end aligned Y indicates that the column s property is always true for the row s term at the very left while indicates that the property is not guaranteed in general it might or might not hold For example that every equivalence relation is symmetric but not necessarily antisymmetric is indicated by Y in the Symmetric column and in the Antisymmetric column respectively All definitions tacitly require the homogeneous relation R displaystyle R be transitive for all a b c displaystyle a b c if aRb displaystyle aRb and bRc displaystyle bRc then aRc displaystyle aRc A term s definition may require additional properties that are not listed in this table In mathematics specifically order theory the join of a subset S displaystyle S of a partially ordered set P displaystyle P is the supremum least upper bound of S displaystyle S denoted S textstyle bigvee S and similarly the meet of S displaystyle S is the infimum greatest lower bound denoted S textstyle bigwedge S In general the join and meet of a subset of a partially ordered set need not exist Join and meet are dual to one another with respect to order inversion This Hasse diagram depicts a partially ordered set with four elements a b the maximal element a displaystyle vee b equal to the join of a and b and the minimal element a displaystyle wedge b equal to the meet of a and b The join meet of a maximal minimal element and another element is the maximal minimal element and conversely the meet join of a maximal minimal element with another element is the other element Thus every pair in this poset has both a meet and a join and the poset can be classified as a lattice A partially ordered set in which all pairs have a join is a join semilattice Dually a partially ordered set in which all pairs have a meet is a meet semilattice A partially ordered set that is both a join semilattice and a meet semilattice is a lattice A lattice in which every subset not just every pair possesses a meet and a join is a complete lattice It is also possible to define a partial lattice in which not all pairs have a meet or join but the operations when defined satisfy certain axioms The join meet of a subset of a totally ordered set is simply the maximal minimal element of that subset if such an element exists If a subset S displaystyle S of a partially ordered set P displaystyle P is also an upward directed set then its join if it exists is called a directed join or directed supremum Dually if S displaystyle S is a downward directed set then its meet if it exists is a directed meet or directed infimum DefinitionsPartial order approach Let A displaystyle A be a set with a partial order displaystyle leq and let x y A displaystyle x y in A An element m displaystyle m of A displaystyle A is called the meet or greatest lower bound or infimum of x and y displaystyle x text and y and is denoted by x y displaystyle x wedge y if the following two conditions are satisfied m x and m y displaystyle m leq x text and m leq y that is m displaystyle m is a lower bound of x and y displaystyle x text and y For any w A displaystyle w in A if w x and w y displaystyle w leq x text and w leq y then w m displaystyle w leq m that is m displaystyle m is greater than or equal to any other lower bound of x and y displaystyle x text and y The meet need not exist either since the pair has no lower bound at all or since none of the lower bounds is greater than all the others However if there is a meet of x and y displaystyle x text and y then it is unique since if both m and m displaystyle m text and m prime are greatest lower bounds of x and y displaystyle x text and y then m m and m m displaystyle m leq m prime text and m prime leq m and thus m m displaystyle m m prime If not all pairs of elements from A displaystyle A have a meet then the meet can still be seen as a partial binary operation on A displaystyle A If the meet does exist then it is denoted x y displaystyle x wedge y If all pairs of elements from A displaystyle A have a meet then the meet is a binary operation on A displaystyle A and it is easy to see that this operation fulfills the following three conditions For any elements x y z A displaystyle x y z in A x y y x displaystyle x wedge y y wedge x commutativity x y z x y z displaystyle x wedge y wedge z x wedge y wedge z associativity and x x x displaystyle x wedge x x idempotency Joins are defined dually with the join of x and y displaystyle x text and y if it exists denoted by x y displaystyle x vee y An element j displaystyle j of A displaystyle A is the join or least upper bound or supremum of x and y displaystyle x text and y in A displaystyle A if the following two conditions are satisfied x j and y j displaystyle x leq j text and y leq j that is j displaystyle j is an upper bound of x and y displaystyle x text and y For any w A displaystyle w in A if x w and y w displaystyle x leq w text and y leq w then j w displaystyle j leq w that is j displaystyle j is less than or equal to any other upper bound of x and y displaystyle x text and y Universal algebra approach By definition a binary operation displaystyle wedge on a set A displaystyle A is a meet if it satisfies the three conditions a b and c The pair A displaystyle A wedge is then a meet semilattice Moreover we then may define a binary relation displaystyle leq on A by stating that x y displaystyle x leq y if and only if x y x displaystyle x wedge y x In fact this relation is a partial order on A displaystyle A Indeed for any elements x y z A displaystyle x y z in A x x displaystyle x leq x since x x x displaystyle x wedge x x by c if x y and y x displaystyle x leq y text and y leq x then x x y y x y displaystyle x x wedge y y wedge x y by a and if x y and y z displaystyle x leq y text and y leq z then x z displaystyle x leq z since then x z x y z x y z x y x displaystyle x wedge z x wedge y wedge z x wedge y wedge z x wedge y x by b Both meets and joins equally satisfy this definition a couple of associated meet and join operations yield partial orders which are the reverse of each other When choosing one of these orders as the main ones one also fixes which operation is considered a meet the one giving the same order and which is considered a join the other one Equivalence of approaches If A displaystyle A leq is a partially ordered set such that each pair of elements in A displaystyle A has a meet then indeed x y x displaystyle x wedge y x if and only if x y displaystyle x leq y since in the latter case indeed x displaystyle x is a lower bound of x and y displaystyle x text and y and since x displaystyle x is the greatest lower bound if and only if it is a lower bound Thus the partial order defined by the meet in the universal algebra approach coincides with the original partial order Conversely if A displaystyle A wedge is a meet semilattice and the partial order displaystyle leq is defined as in the universal algebra approach and z x y displaystyle z x wedge y for some elements x y A displaystyle x y in A then z displaystyle z is the greatest lower bound of x and y displaystyle x text and y with respect to displaystyle leq since z x x z x x y x x y x y z displaystyle z wedge x x wedge z x wedge x wedge y x wedge x wedge y x wedge y z and therefore z x displaystyle z leq x Similarly z y displaystyle z leq y and if w displaystyle w is another lower bound of x and y displaystyle x text and y then w x w y w displaystyle w wedge x w wedge y w whence w z w x y w x y w y w displaystyle w wedge z w wedge x wedge y w wedge x wedge y w wedge y w Thus there is a meet defined by the partial order defined by the original meet and the two meets coincide In other words the two approaches yield essentially equivalent concepts a set equipped with both a binary relation and a binary operation such that each one of these structures determines the other and fulfill the conditions for partial orders or meets respectively Meets of general subsetsIf A displaystyle A wedge is a meet semilattice then the meet may be extended to a well defined meet of any non empty finite set by the technique described in iterated binary operations Alternatively if the meet defines or is defined by a partial order some subsets of A displaystyle A indeed have infima with respect to this and it is reasonable to consider such an infimum as the meet of the subset For non empty finite subsets the two approaches yield the same result and so either may be taken as a definition of meet In the case where each subset of A displaystyle A has a meet in fact A displaystyle A leq is a complete lattice for details see completeness order theory ExamplesIf some power set X displaystyle wp X is partially ordered in the usual way by displaystyle subseteq then joins are unions and meets are intersections in symbols and displaystyle vee cup text and wedge cap where the similarity of these symbols may be used as a mnemonic for remembering that displaystyle vee denotes the join supremum and displaystyle wedge denotes the meet infimum More generally suppose that F displaystyle mathcal F neq varnothing is a family of subsets of some set X displaystyle X that is partially ordered by displaystyle subseteq If F displaystyle mathcal F is closed under arbitrary unions and arbitrary intersections and if A B Fi i I displaystyle A B left F i right i in I belong to F displaystyle mathcal F then A B A B A B A B i IFi i IFi and i IFi i IFi displaystyle A vee B A cup B quad A wedge B A cap B quad bigvee i in I F i bigcup i in I F i quad text and quad bigwedge i in I F i bigcap i in I F i But if F displaystyle mathcal F is not closed under unions then A B displaystyle A vee B exists in F displaystyle mathcal F subseteq if and only if there exists a unique displaystyle subseteq smallest J F displaystyle J in mathcal F such that A B J displaystyle A cup B subseteq J For example if F 1 2 1 2 3 R displaystyle mathcal F 1 2 1 2 3 mathbb R then 1 2 1 2 3 displaystyle 1 vee 2 1 2 3 whereas if F 1 2 1 2 3 0 1 2 R displaystyle mathcal F 1 2 1 2 3 0 1 2 mathbb R then 1 2 displaystyle 1 vee 2 does not exist because the sets 0 1 2 and 1 2 3 displaystyle 0 1 2 text and 1 2 3 are the only upper bounds of 1 and 2 displaystyle 1 text and 2 in F displaystyle mathcal F subseteq that could possibly be the least upper bound 1 2 displaystyle 1 vee 2 but 0 1 2 1 2 3 displaystyle 0 1 2 not subseteq 1 2 3 and 1 2 3 0 1 2 displaystyle 1 2 3 not subseteq 0 1 2 If F 1 2 0 2 3 0 1 3 displaystyle mathcal F 1 2 0 2 3 0 1 3 then 1 2 displaystyle 1 vee 2 does not exist because there is no upper bound of 1 and 2 displaystyle 1 text and 2 in F displaystyle mathcal F subseteq See alsoLocally convex vector latticeNotesGratzer George 21 November 2002 General Lattice Theory Second edition Springer Science amp Business Media p 52 ISBN 978 3 7643 6996 5 Hachtel Gary D Somenzi Fabio 1996 Logic synthesis and verification algorithms Kluwer Academic Publishers p 88 ISBN 0792397460 It can be immediately determined that supremums and infimums in this canonical simple example X displaystyle wp X subseteq are and displaystyle cup text and cap respectively The similarity of the symbol displaystyle vee to displaystyle cup and of displaystyle wedge to displaystyle cap may thus be used as a mnemonic for remembering that in the most general setting displaystyle vee denotes the supremum because a supremum is a bound from above just like A B displaystyle A cup B is above A displaystyle A and B displaystyle B while displaystyle wedge denotes the infimum because an infimum is a bound from below just like A B displaystyle A cap B is below A displaystyle A and B displaystyle B This can also be used to remember whether meets joins are denoted by displaystyle vee or by displaystyle wedge Intuition suggests that join ing two sets together should produce their union A B displaystyle A cup B which looks similar to A B displaystyle A vee B so join must be denoted by displaystyle vee Similarly two sets should meet at their intersection A B displaystyle A cap B which looks similar to A B displaystyle A wedge B so meet must be denoted by displaystyle wedge ReferencesDavey B A Priestley H A 2002 Introduction to Lattices and Order 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 78451 4 Zbl 1002 06001 Vickers Steven 1989 Topology via Logic Cambridge Tracts in Theoretic Computer Science Vol 5 ISBN 0 521 36062 5 Zbl 0668 54001