Uncountable Interval
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A Uncountable Interval is a Numeric Interval that can be mapped to an Uncountable Set.
- Context:
- It can be:
- Example(s):
- a Time Interval.
- [0,1)R ⇒ {0, π/4,..., 0.999999...} a Real Number Interval, from The Real Number Sequence.
- [0,∞)I ⇒ {0<1<2<3<4<...<∞}, a Countable Interval (of Non-Negative Integers).
- [1,100]I ⇒ {1 < 2 < 3 ... < 100}
- [1,1] ⇒ {1}, a Degenerate Interval.
- [1,0] ⇒ {}, an Empty Interval.
- See: Countable Interval, Finite Interval, Continuous Random Variable.