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complexify การใช้

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  • Complexify the Lie algebra, so that any traceless matrix is now allowed.
  • Furthermore, this unpredictability complexifies the uses of parallelism.
  • Well, for one thing, lawyers complicate what is simple and complexify what is merely complicated.
  • "Lawyers tend to complexify things and nonlawyers tend to simplify things, " he conceded.
  • To " complexify " a space means extending ordinary scalar multiplication of vectors by real numbers to scalar multiplication by complex numbers.
  • "I think the goal is to complexify the problem for the enemy and not simplify it, " he told CNN on Thursday.
  • Teilhard holds that at all times and everywhere, matter is endeavoring to complexify upon itself, as observed in the evolutionary history of the Earth.
  • "My interest is not to simplify things for the other side but to complexify them, if that is a word, " he said.
  • The classification of irreducible real affine holonomies can be obtained from a careful analysis, using the lists above and the fact that real affine holonomies complexify to complex ones.
  • Simplify or complexify bits of this for the audience, if that works better for time, and enjoy . talk ) 04 : 46, 20 July 2012 ( UTC)
  • Finally, multi-starship scenarios ( and also those involving starbases, battle stations, or civilian convoys ) can complexify the gaming experience to suit the tastes of the most sophisticated wargamer.
  • As human beings continue to come into closer contact with one another, their methods of interaction continue to complexify in the form of better organized social networks, which contributes to an overall increase in consciousness, or the noosphere.
  • More generally, if we have a real gauge group that we wish to supersymmetrize, we first have to complexify it to then acts a "'compensator "'for the complex gauge transformations in effect absorbing them leaving only the real parts.
  • In Teilhard's view, because the Law of Complexity-Consciousness runs everywhere and at all times, and because of the immensity of both time and space and the immensity of the chances for matter to find the right conditions to complexify upon itself, it is highly probable that life exists, has existed, and will exist in the universe apart from our Earth.
  • My guess, however, is that language tends to be cyclical words get smashed together and shortened, and then recombined into long words, which get smashed together and shortened again, slang takes over and words switch out, grammar gets simplified and word order gains prominence & but then normal words turn into particles, and particles transform into cases, and grammar complexifies itself once again, only to repeat the cycle.