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In linguistics, arity is sometimes called valency, not to be confused with valency in mathematics.
ExamplesThe term "arity" is rarely employed in everyday usage. For example, rather than saying "the arity of the addition operation is 2" or "addition is an operation of arity 2" one usually says "addition is a binary operation". In general, the naming of functions or operators with a given arity follows a convention similar to the one used for n-based numeral systems such as binary and hexadecimal. One combines a Latin prefix with the -ary ending; for example:
NullarySometimes it is useful to consider a constant as an operation of arity 0, and hence call it nullary.
UnaryExamples of unary operators in math and in programming include the unary minus and plus, the increment and decrement operators in C-style languages (not in logical languages), and the factorial and absolute value functions in math. The twos complement operator and the address reference operators are examples of unary operators in math and programming. BinaryMost operators encountered in programming are of the binary form. For both programming and math these can be the multiplication operator, the addition operator, the division operator. Logical predicates such as OR, XOR, AND, IMP are typically used as binary operators with two distinct operands. TernaryFrom C, C++, C#, Java, Perl and variants comes the ternary operator n-aryFrom a mathematical point of view, a function of n arguments can always be considered as a function of one single argument which is an element of some product space. However, it may be convenient for notation to consider n-ary functions, as for example multilinear maps (which are not linear maps on the product space, if n≠1). The same is true for programming languages, where functions taking several arguments could always be defined as functions taking a single argument of some complex type or "structure". Other names
An alternative nomenclature is derived in a similar fashion from the corresponding Greek roots; for example, medadic, monadic, dyadic, triadic, polyadic, and so on. Thence derive the alternative terms adicity and adinity for the Latin-derived arity. These words are often used to describe anything related to that number (e.g., undenary chess is a chess variant with an 11×11 board, or the Millenary Petition of 1603). See alsoReferencesA monograph available free online:
et:Aarsus es:Aridad eo:Loknombro fr:Arité gl:Aridade io:Arito nl:Plaatsigheid no:Aritet pl:Argumentowość pt:Aridade ru:Арность sk:Árnosť sv:Aritet
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