Re: Idempotence and "Replication Insensitivity" are equivalent ?

From: William Hughes <wpihughes_at_hotmail.com>
Date: 20 Sep 2006 05:47:47 -0700
Message-ID: <1158756467.891832.117170_at_m7g2000cwm.googlegroups.com>


Bob Badour wrote:
> William Hughes wrote:
>
> > Chris Smith wrote:
> >
> >>Reordering to avoid repetition...
> >>
> >>William Hughes <wpihughes_at_hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> [snip]
>
> >>
> > Here we have no restriction whatsoever on the output of an aggregate
> > function. This seems much more reasonable than your very
> > restrictive definition in which an aggregate function could only map
> > into A. Still there is a second more fundamental issue. What could
> > the binary form of a function that find the largest five elements be?
>
> A special case of restrict that doesn't aggregate anything.

But then you are left with a binary form that doesn't do anything. When you iterate this you will get a function of an arbitrary number of variables that doesn't do anything.

                        -William Hughes
Received on Wed Sep 20 2006 - 14:47:47 CEST

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