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In , the qualifier pointwise is used to indicate that a certain property is defined by considering each value f(x) of some function f. An important class of pointwise concepts are the pointwise operations, that is, operations defined on functions by applying the operations to function values separately for each point in the domain of definition. Important relations can also be defined pointwise.


Pointwise operations

Formal definition
A binary operation on a set can be lifted pointwise to an operation on the set of all functions from to as follows: Given two functions and , define the function by

Commonly, o and O are denoted by the same symbol. A similar definition is used for unary operations o, and for operations of other .


Examples
The pointwise addition f+g of two functions f and g with the same domain and is defined by:

The pointwise product or pointwise multiplication is:

The pointwise product with a scalar is usually written with the scalar term first. Thus, when \lambda is a scalar:

An example of an operation on functions which is not pointwise is .


Properties
Pointwise operations inherit such properties as , and from corresponding operations on the . If A is some algebraic structure, the set of all functions X to the of A can be turned into an algebraic structure of the same type in an analogous way.


Componentwise operations
Componentwise operations are usually defined on vectors, where vectors are elements of the set K^n for some n and some field K. If we denote the i-th component of any vector v as v_i, then componentwise addition is (u+v)_i = u_i+v_i.

Componentwise operations can be defined on matrices. Matrix addition, where (A + B)_{ij} = A_{ij} + B_{ij} is a componentwise operation while matrix multiplication is not.

A tuple can be regarded as a function, and a vector is a tuple. Therefore, any vector v corresponds to the function f:n\to K such that f(i)=v_i, and any componentwise operation on vectors is the pointwise operation on functions corresponding to those vectors.


Pointwise relations
In it is common to define a pointwise on functions. With A, B posets, the set of functions AB can be ordered by defining fg if . Pointwise orders also inherit some properties of the underlying posets. For instance if A and B are continuous lattices, then so is the set of functions AB with pointwise order.Gierz et al., p. xxxiii Using the pointwise order on functions one can concisely define other important notions, for instance:Gierz, et al., p. 26

  • A c on a poset P is a monotone and self-map on P (i.e. a projection operator) with the additional property that id Ac, where id is the identity function.
  • Similarly, a projection operator k is called a if and only if k ≤ id A.

An example of an pointwise relation is pointwise convergence of functions—a of functions (f_n)_{n=1}^\infty with f_n:X \longrightarrow Y converges pointwise to a function if for each in \lim_{n \to \infty} f_n(x) = f(x).


Notes
For order theory examples:
  • T. S. Blyth, Lattices and Ordered Algebraic Structures, Springer, 2005, .
  • G. Gierz, K. H. Hofmann, K. Keimel, J. D. Lawson, M. Mislove, D. S. Scott: Continuous Lattices and Domains, Cambridge University Press, 2003.

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