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Magma (algebra)(Redirected from Magma (mathematics))
In abstract algebra, a magma (also called a groupoid) is a particularly basic kind of algebraic structure. Specifically, a magma consists of a set M equipped with a single binary operation M × M → M. A binary operation is closed by definition, but no other axioms are imposed on the operation. The term magma for this kind of structure was introduced by Bourbaki; however, the term groupoid is a very common alternative. Unfortunately, the term groupoid also refers to an entirely different kind of algebraic concept described at Groupoid.
Types of magmasMagmas are not often studied as such; instead there are several different kinds of magmas, depending on what axioms one might require of the operation. Commonly studied types of magmas include
Free magmaA free magma on a set X is the "most general possible" magma generated by the set X (that is there are no relations or axioms imposed on the generators; see free object). It can be described, in terms familiar in computer science, as the magma of full binary trees with leaves labelled by elements of X. The operation is that of joining trees at the root. It therefore has a foundational role in syntax. See also: free semigroup, free group. More definitionsA magma (S, *) is called
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