Jump to content

Generic

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Generic (mathematics))

Generic or generics may refer to:

In business

[edit]
  • Generic term, a common name used for a range or class of similar things not protected by trademark
  • Generic brand, a brand for a product that does not have an associated brand or trademark, other than the trading name of the business providing the product
  • Generic trademark, a trademark that sometimes or usually replaces a common term in colloquial usage
  • Generic drug, a drug identified by its chemical name rather than its brand name

In computer programming

[edit]
  • Generic function, a computer programming entity made up of all methods having the same name
  • Generic programming, a computer programming paradigm based on method/functions or classes defined irrespective of the concrete data types used upon instantiation

In linguistics

[edit]

In mathematics

[edit]
  • Generic filter, in mathematical logic and set theory, a tool for studying axiom independence
  • Generic point, a point of an algebraic variety, which has no other property than those that are shared by all other points, or, in scheme theory, a point that contains all other points
  • Generic polynomial, a polynomial whose coefficients are indeterminates
  • Generic property, a formal definition of a property shared by almost all objects of a specific type
  • GENERIC formalism, a mathematical framework to describe irreversible phenomena in thermodynamics
  • 1-generic, in computability, a kind of "random" sequence

Other

[edit]

See also

[edit]