1.
[syn: substitution, permutation, transposition, replacement, switch]
2. the act of changing the arrangement of a given number of elements;
3. complete change in character or condition;
- Example: "the permutations...taking place in the physical world"- Henry Miller
4. act of changing the lineal order of objects in a group;
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:
Permutation \Per`mu*ta"tion\ (p[~e]r`m[-u]"t[=a]"sn[u^]n), n.
[L. permutatio: cf. F. permutation. See Permute.]
1. The act of permuting; exchange of the thing for another;
mutual transference; interchange.
[1913 Webster]
The violent convulsions and permutations that have
been made in property. --Burke.
[1913 Webster]
2. (Math.)
(a) The arrangement of any determinate number of things,
as units, objects, letters, etc., in all possible
orders, one after the other; -- called also
alternation. Cf. Combination, n., 4.
(b) Any one of such possible arrangements.
[1913 Webster]
3. (Law) Barter; exchange.
[1913 Webster]
Permutation lock, a lock in which the parts can be
transposed or shifted, so as to require different
arrangements of the tumblers on different occasions of
unlocking.
[1913 Webster]
WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006):
permutation
n 1: an event in which one thing is substituted for another;
"the replacement of lost blood by a transfusion of donor
blood" [syn: substitution, permutation,
transposition, replacement, switch]
2: the act of changing the arrangement of a given number of
elements
3: complete change in character or condition; "the
permutations...taking place in the physical world"- Henry
Miller
4: act of changing the lineal order of objects in a group
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (19 January 2023):
permutation
1. An ordering of a certain number of elements
of a given set.
For instance, the permutations of (1,2,3) are (1,2,3) (2,3,1)
(3,1,2) (3,2,1) (1,3,2) (2,1,3).
Permutations form one of the canonical examples of a "group"
- they can be composed and you can find an inverse permutation
that reverses the action of any given permutation.
The number of permutations of r things taken from a set of n
is
n P r = n! / (n-r)!
where "n P r" is usually written with n and r as subscripts
and n! is the factorial of n.
What the football pools call a "permutation" is not a
permutation but a combination - the order does not matter.
2. A bijection for which the domain and range are the
same set and so
f(f'(x)) = f'(f(x)) = x.
(2001-05-10)