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01 Logic1

This document provides an overview of a course in discrete mathematics. It begins by defining what mathematics and discrete mathematics are, noting that discrete mathematics studies well-defined conceptual objects and structures. It then lists some common discrete objects and structures studied in the course like sets, functions, graphs, and algorithms. The document outlines the course topics which include logic and proofs, basic structures, algorithms, counting, and discrete probability. It provides examples of propositions and defines propositional logic as dealing with statements and compound statements built using Boolean connectives. Truth tables are introduced as a way to define operators like negation, conjunction, disjunction, exclusive-or, and implication.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
22 views24 pages

01 Logic1

This document provides an overview of a course in discrete mathematics. It begins by defining what mathematics and discrete mathematics are, noting that discrete mathematics studies well-defined conceptual objects and structures. It then lists some common discrete objects and structures studied in the course like sets, functions, graphs, and algorithms. The document outlines the course topics which include logic and proofs, basic structures, algorithms, counting, and discrete probability. It provides examples of propositions and defines propositional logic as dealing with statements and compound statements built using Boolean connectives. Truth tables are introduced as a way to define operators like negation, conjunction, disjunction, exclusive-or, and implication.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Discrete Mathematics for

Dept. Computer Sci., International University of Twintech

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Lecture 1
Course Overview
Chapter 1. The Foundations
1.1 Propositional Logic

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What is Mathematics, really?
 It’s not just about numbers!
 Mathematics is much more than that:

Mathematics is, most generally, the study of


any and all absolutely certain truths about
any and all perfectly well-defined concepts.

 These concepts can be about numbers,


symbols, objects, images, sounds, anything!
 It is a way to interpret the world around you.

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So, what’s this class about?
What are “discrete structures” anyway?
 “Discrete” - Composed of distinct, separable
parts. (Opposite of continuous.)
discrete:continuous :: digital:analog
 “Structures” - Objects built up from simpler
objects according to some definite pattern.
 “Discrete Mathematics” - The study of
discrete, mathematical (i.e. well-defined
conceptual) objects and structures.

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Discrete Objects/Concepts and
Structures We Study
 Trees
 Propositions
 Predicates
 Proofs
 Sets
 Functions
 Orders of Growth
 Algorithms
 Integers
 Summations
 Sequences
 Strings
 Permutations
 Combinations
 Graphs
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Why Study Discrete Math?
 The basis of all of digital information
processing is: Discrete manipulations of
discrete structures represented in memory.
 It’s the basic language and conceptual
foundation for all of computer science.
 Discrete math concepts are also widely used
throughout math, science, engineering,
economics, biology, etc., …
 A generally useful tool for rational thought!
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Uses for Discrete Math in
Computer Science
 Advanced algorithms & data structures
 Programming language compilers & interpreters
 Computer networks
 Operating systems
 Computer architecture
 Database management systems
 Cryptography
 Error correction codes
 Graphics & animation algorithms, game engines,
etc.…
 i.e., the whole field!

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Course Topics
 Logic and Proofs (Chap. 1)
 Basic Structures (Chap. 2)
 Sets, Functions, Sequences and Summations
 Algorithms, Integers, and Matrices (Chap. 3)
 Induction and Recursion (Chap. 4)
 Counting (Chap. 5)
 Discrete Probability (Chap. 6)

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1.1 Propositional Logic
 Logic
 Study of reasoning.
 Specifically concerned with whether reasoning is correct.
 Focuses on the relationship among statements, not on the
content of any particular statement.
 Gives precise meaning to mathematical statements.
 Propositional Logic is the logic that deals with
statements (propositions) and compound statements
built from simpler statements using so-called
Boolean connectives.
 Some applications in computer science:
 Design of digital electronic circuits.
 Expressing conditions in programs.
 Queries to databases & search engines.
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Definition of a Proposition
Definition: A proposition (denoted p, q, r, …) is simply:
 a statement (i.e., a declarative sentence)
 with some definite meaning,

(not vague or ambiguous)


 having a truth value that’s either true (T) or false (F)
 it is never both, neither, or somewhere “in between!”

 However, you might not know the actual truth value,


 and, the truth value might depend on the situation or context.
 Later, we will study probability theory, in which we
assign degrees of certainty (“between” T and F) to
propositions.
 But for now: think True/False only! (or in terms of 1 and 0)

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Examples of Propositions
 It is raining. (In a given situation)
 Beijing is the capital of China. (T)
 2 + 2 = 5. (F)
 1 + 2 = 3. (T)
 A fact-based declaration is a proposition,
even if no one knows whether it is true
 11213 is prime.

 There exists an odd perfect number.

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Examples of Non-Propositions
The following are NOT propositions:
 Who’s there? (interrogative, question)

 Just do it! (imperative, command)

 La la la la la. (meaningless interjection)

 Yeah, I sorta dunno, whatever... (vague)

 1 + 2 (expression with a non-true/false value)

 x + 2 = 5 (declaration about semantic tokens

of non-constant value)

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Truth Tables
 An operator or connective combines one or more
operand expressions into a larger expression. (e.g., “+” in numeric
expressions.)
 Unary operators take one operand (e.g., −3);
Binary operators take two operands (e.g. 3  4).
 Propositional or Boolean operators operate on propositions
(or their truth values) instead of on numbers.
 The Boolean domain is the set {T, F}. Either of its elements is
called a Boolean value.
An n-tuple (p1,…,pn) of Boolean values is called a Boolean n-tuple.
 An n-operand truth table is a table that assigns a Boolean value to
the set of all Boolean n-tuples.

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Some Popular Boolean Operators

Formal Name Nickname Arity Symbol

Negation operator NOT Unary ¬

Conjunction operator AND Binary 

Disjunction operator OR Binary 

Exclusive-OR operator XOR Binary 

Implication operator IMPLIES Binary 

Biconditional operator IFF Binary ↔

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The Negation Operator
 The unary negation operator “¬” (NOT)
transforms a proposition into its logical negation.
 E.g. If p = “I have brown hair.”
then ¬p = “It is not the case that I have brown
hair” or “I do not have brown hair.”
 The truth table for NOT:
p p
T F
F T
Operand Result
column column
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The Conjunction Operator
 The binary conjunction operator “” (AND)
combines two propositions to form their logical
conjunction.

 E.g. If p = “I will have salad for lunch.” and


q = “I will have steak for dinner.”
then, pq = “I will have salad for lunch and
I will have steak for dinner.”

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Conjunction Truth Table
Operand columns

p q pq
T T T
T F F
F T F
F F F
 Note that a conjunction p1  p2  …  pn of n
propositions will have 2n rows in its truth table

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The Disjunction Operator
 The binary disjunction operator “” (OR)
combines two propositions to form their
logical disjunction.

 E.g. If p = “My car has a bad engine.” and


q = “My car has a bad carburetor.”
then, pq = “My car has a bad engine, or
my car has a bad carburetor.”

Meaning is like “and/or” in informal English.

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Disjunction Truth Table
p q pq
T T T
T F T Note difference
F T T from AND

F F F
 Note that pq means that p is true, or q is
true, or both are true!
 So, this operation is also called inclusive or,
because it includes the possibility that both
p and q are true.
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The Exclusive-Or Operator

 The binary exclusive-or operator “” (XOR)


combines two propositions to form their logical
“exclusive or”

 E.g. If p = “I will earn an A in this course.” and


q = “I will drop this course.”, then
p  q = “I will either earn an A in this course,
or I will drop it (but not both!)”

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Exclusive-Or Truth Table
p q pq
Note difference
T T F from OR.
T F T
F T T
F F F
 Note that pq means that p is true, or q is
true, but not both!
 This operation is called exclusive or,
because it excludes the possibility that both
p and q are true.
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Natural Language is Ambiguous
 Note that the English “or” can be ambiguous
regarding the “both” case!
p q p "or" q
 “Pat is a singer or T T ?
Pat is a writer.” - 
T F T
 “Pat is a man or
F T T
Pat is a woman.” - 
F F F
 Need context to disambiguate the meaning!
 For this class, assume “or” means inclusive ().

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The Implication Operator
 The conditional statement (aka implication)
p  q states that p implies q.
 I.e., If p is true, then q is true; but if p is not true,
then q could be either true or false.
 E.g., let p = “You study hard.”
q = “You will get a good grade.”
p  q = “If you study hard, then you will
get a good grade.” (else, it could go either way)
 p: hypothesis or antecedent or premise
 q: conclusion or consequence

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Implication Truth Table

p q pq
T T T
The only
T F F False case!
F T T
F F T
 p  q is false only when p is true but q is not true.
 p  q does not require that p or q are ever true!
 E.g. “(1=0)  pigs can fly” is TRUE!

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