A set of ordered pairs is a relation. Or Just simply "Coordinates"
Those conditions satisfy the conditions of a function.
If every element of the first set is paired with exactly one element of the second set, it is called an injective (or one-to-one) function.An example of such a relation is below.Let f(x) and x be the set R (the set of all real numbers)f(x)= x3, clearly this maps every element of the first set, x, to one and only one element of the second set, f(x), even though every element of the second set is not mapped to.
No.
A relation is a set of ordered pairs.A function is a relation such that for each element there is one and only one second element.Example:{(1, 2), (4, 3), (6, 1), (5, 2)}This is a function because every ordered pair has a different first element.Example:{(1, 2), (5, 6), (7, 2), (1, 3)}This is a relation but not a function because when the first element is 1, the second element can be either 2 or 3.
NOTHING
they are brothers in the Senju clan of the Forest, second only to the Uchiha clan
1 Watt = 1 Joule / Second = 1 Newton-meter / Second.
Causation principle refers to the relation between the cause or an event and the effect or a second event. The second event is the physical result of the first.
You and the child of your second cousin are second cousins, once removed.
The child of your second cousin is your second cousin, once removed.
Your mother's second cousin is your second cousin once removed.
Your second cousin and your son are second cousins, once removed.
the second hokage was Tsunade's granduncle
Your second cousin's siblings are also your second cousins. The children of your second cousins are your second cousins, once removed.
The relation, between two sets of objects, is a mapping which associates elements of the first set to those of the second set.
second cousins twice removed.