Boolean
The adjective Boolean, coined in honor of George Boole, is used in many contexts:
- An evaluation that results in either of the truth values 'true' or 'false'.
- A Boolean value is a truth value, either 'true' or 'false', often coded 1 and 0, respectively.
- A Boolean-valued function of one variable is a characteristic function or an indicator function of a subset of its domain, namely "the support" of that function
- For a Boolean-valued function of two variables see binary relation.
- For use in mathematics, see Boolean algebra.
- For a basic introduction to sets, Boolean operations, Venn diagrams, truth tables, and Boolean applications, see Boolean logic
- In computer science, "Boolean" is a datatype, usually a primitive datatype. See Boolean datatype.
- For Boolean templates on Wikipedia, see Category:Boolean templates.
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