Biconditional vs Undefined - What's the difference?
biconditional | undefined |
Having two conditions
(logic) An "if and only if" conditional wherein the truth of each term depends on the truth of the other
* {{quote-journal, 2008, date=January 3, Anand Vaidya, Modal Rationalism and Modal Monism, Erkenntnis, url=, doi=10.1007/s10670-007-9093-7, volume=68, issue=2, pages=
, passage=Although (MR) is discussed here as simply (CP ), in actuality (MR) is a biconditional of which one part is (CP ). }}
Lacking a definition or value.
(mathematics, computing) That does not have a meaning and is thus not assigned an interpretation.
As adjectives the difference between biconditional and undefined
is that biconditional is having two conditions while undefined is lacking a definition or value.As a noun biconditional
is (logic) an "if and only if" conditional wherein the truth of each term depends on the truth of the other.biconditional
English
Adjective
(-)Noun
(en noun)See also
* (wikipedia "biconditional")undefined
English
Adjective
(wikipedia undefined) (-)- The result of division by zero is undefined .