In mathematics, the qualifier pointwise is used to indicate that a certain property is defined by considering each value
f(x)
f.
A binary operation on a set can be lifted pointwise to an operation on the set of all functions from to as follows: Given two functions and, define the function byCommonly, o and O are denoted by the same symbol. A similar definition is used for unary operations o, and for operations of other arity.
The pointwise addition
f+g
f
g
λ
An example of an operation on functions which is not pointwise is convolution.
Pointwise operations inherit such properties as associativity, commutativity and distributivity from corresponding operations on the codomain. If
A
X
A
Componentwise operations are usually defined on vectors, where vectors are elements of the set
Kn
n
K
i
v
vi
(u+v)i=ui+vi
Componentwise operations can be defined on matrices. Matrix addition, where
(A+B)ij=Aij+Bij
A tuple can be regarded as a function, and a vector is a tuple. Therefore, any vector
v
f:n\toK
f(i)=vi
In order theory it is common to define a pointwise partial order on functions. With A, B posets, the set of functions A → B can be ordered by defining f ≤ g if . Pointwise orders also inherit some properties of the underlying posets. For instance if A and B are continuous lattices, then so is the set of functions A → B with pointwise order.[1] Using the pointwise order on functions one can concisely define other important notions, for instance:[2]
An example of an infinitary pointwise relation is pointwise convergence of functions - a sequence of functionswithconverges pointwise to a function if for each in
For order theory examples: