Definition of Substructures. Meaning of Substructures. Synonyms of Substructures

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Substructures. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Substructures and, of course, Substructures synonyms and on the right images related to the word Substructures.

Definition of Substructures

Substructure
Substructure Sub*struc"ture, n. [Pref. sub- + structure.] 1. (Arch.) Same as Substruction. 2. An under structure; a foundation; groundwork.

Meaning of Substructures from wikipedia

- up substructure in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Substructure may refer to: Substructure (engineering) Substructure (mathematics) Substructure (marxist...
- −1, 1) of groups, the substructures of a group are its subgroups. In the language (×, 1) of monoids, however, the substructures of a group are its submonoids...
- Substructuring (DS) is an engineering tool used to model and analyse the dynamics of mechanical systems by means of its components or substructures....
- C–C–O–H and ether would no longer match. In mathematical terms, finding substructures is an application of graph theory, specifically subgraph matching. Standard...
- In logic, a substructural logic is a logic lacking one of the usual structural rules (e.g. of classical and intuitionistic logic), such as weakening,...
- In computer science, a problem is said to have optimal substructure if an optimal solution can be constructed from optimal solutions of its subproblems...
- cardinals (see also Critical point). E. C. Milner, The use of elementary substructures in combinatorics (1993). Appearing in Discrete Mathematics, vol. 136...
- The substructure of a building transfers the load of the building to the ground and isolates it horizontally from the ground. This includes foundations...
- Substructural type systems are a family of type systems analogous to substructural logics where one or more of the structural rules are absent or only...
- only upon 'reduced' forms of its arguments, such as Walther recursion, substructural recursion, or "strongly normalizing" as proven by abstract interpretation...