|  | Posted by Davιmon on 07/03/14 11:44 
Toby Inkster arranged shapes to form:
 > DavΓ©mon wrote:
 >
 >> Lists with no items? That doesn't make any sense to me at all!
 >
 > The mathematical equivalent for the UL element would be what is called a
 > "set".
 >
 > A set is a group of numbers/shapes/letters/vectors/whatever. Some examples
 > are the set of all positive integers, the set of letters that directly
 > follow vowels in the alphabet, and the set of all people called Kevin.
 >
 > The set is an abstract concept, and can be dealt with mathematically, in
 > many cases without worrying about how many (if any) elements it contains.
 
 However, HTML is a language, and I don't think Language and Mathematics are
 directly comparable.
 
 For example, in maths, two negatives make a positive, wheras in language
 (English at least) two negatives are just emphatically negative. "I don't
 know nothing about it".
 
 The other difference between the idea of a list and a set, is that lists
 imply an order, even an unordered list <ul> still retains that quality.
 Mathematically [set] that order isn't important, but in terms of language
 [lists], the position of the object in realtion to the other objects
 invariably is.
 
 If you have either 1 thing, or 0 things, then they can't be sequentially
 related to other things, so therefore not lists. I think... ?
 
 --
 
 DavΓ©mon
 http://www.nightsoil.co.uk/
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