Idempotent Definition

adjective
(mathematics, computing) Describing an action which, when performed multiple times, has no further effect on its subject after the first time it is performed.
A projection operator is idempotent.
Every finite semigroup has an idempotent element.
Wiktionary
(mathematics) Said of an element of an algebraic structure (such as a group or semigroup) with a binary operation: that when the element operates on itself, the result is equal to itself.
Every group has a unique idempotent element: namely, its identity element.
Wiktionary
(mathematics) Said of a binary operation: that all of the distinct elements it can operate on are idempotent (in the sense given just above).
Since the AND logical operator is commutative, associative, and idempotent, then it distributes with respect to itself. (This is useful for understanding one of the conjunction rules of simplification to Prenex Normal Form, if the universal quantifier is thought of as a "big AND".)
Wiktionary
noun

An idempotent ring or other structure.

Wiktionary

Other Word Forms of Idempotent

Noun

Singular:
idempotent
Plural:
idempotents

Origin of Idempotent

  • Latin roots, idem (“same") +"Ž potent (“having power") - literally, “having the same power".

    From Wiktionary

  • Coined 1870 by American mathematician Benjamin Peirce in context of algebra.

    From Wiktionary

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