|  The Set of Posets | 
In General
  > s.a. posets and types of posets.
  * As a poset: It is partially
    ordered by containment, with each Pn
    at one level in the minimal ranking of P.
  * As a commutative semi-ring:
    With Cartesian product and cardinal sum as operations.
  * As a metric space:
    > see types of distances.
  * Topology:
    Pn has a topology
    from a distance, and P can be given one as a disjoint union,
    or from a partial order.
  @ References: Arhangel'skii & Buzyakova T&A(09) [linear orders, topology of pointwise convergence].
Operations on a Poset > s.a. Wikipedia page on the
  way-below relation [domain theory].
  * Subposet: Any subset, with the induced order.
  * Covering poset: The
    set C(P) of all covering pairs in P, with
    (a, b) < (a', b') iff (a,
    b) = (a', b') or b < a'
    [@ Behrendt DM(88)].
  * Duality: The dual P*
    of a poset P has the same underlying set, but the relations are
    reversed, in the sense that x < y in P* iff
    y < x in P; Duality is the only non-identity
    automorphism of the ordered set of isomorphism types of finite posets,
    and of the lattice of universal classes of posets.
  * Extension: Given an n-element
    poset (P, <P),
    an extension of it is an order <L
    on P, such that x <P
    y implies x <L
    y; A linear extension is one in which P is totally ordered.
  * Set of antichains:
    Various possible orders can be defined; Used in quantum gravity.
  @ Duality: Banaschewski & Bruns Ord(88);
    Navarro Ord(90);
    Jezek & McKenzie Ord(10).
  @ Extensions: Edelman et al Ord(89),
    Brightwell & Winkler Ord(91) [number of linear extensions];
    Canfield & Williamson Ord(95)
      [loop-free algorithm for linear extensions];
    Corrêa & Szwarcfiter DM(05) [set of extensions].
  @ Transitive closure: Ma & Spinrad Ord(91).
  @ Completion: Banaschewski ZMLGM(56);
    in Bombelli & Meyer PLA(89);
    Nation & Pogel Ord(97);
    > s.a. limits.
  @ Exponentiation: & Birkhoff;
    McKenzie Ord(99),
    Ord(00)
      [AP = BP
      implies A = B].
  @ Other operations: McKenzie Ord(03) [decompositions, + history];
    Pach et al JCTA(13) [new operation, rotation of a finite poset].
Binary Operations on Posets > s.a. Star Product.
  * Cardinal sum:
    P1 + P2
    is the disjoint union of the two posets.
  * Cartesian product:
    P1 × P2
    is the set of ordered pairs, ordered by (x1,
    x2) < (y1,
    y2) iff x1
    < y1 and x2
    < y2.
  * Intersection: Given two different orders
    <1 and <2 defined
    on the same underlying (labelled) set P, their intersection is defined by a
    <1 and 2 b iff a <1
    b and a <2 b; It is used to
    represent an order of dimension k as intersection of k linear orders.
  * Ordinal sum: P1
    ⊕ P2 is "P1
    sitting on top of P2", or
    P1 ∪ P2
    with all elements of P1 preceding all those of
    P2.
Operations on Families of Posets > see Inductive Limit.
Generalizations
  > s.a. Preorder; Quasiorder;
  set theory [directed set].
  * Semiorder: A set with
    a transitive, reflexive but not necessarily antisymmetric relation;
    Basically a poset except for the fact that it may have closed loops;
    > s.a. Wikipedia page.
  * n-Poset:
    Any of several concepts that generalize posets in higher category theory;
    n-posets are the same as (n−1,n)-categories;
    For example, a 0-poset is a truth value, and a 1-poset or (0,1)-category
    is simply a poset; > s.a. nLab page.
  * Quantum poset: A hereditarily
    atomic von Neumann algebra equipped with a quantum partial order in Weaver's sense.
  @ General references:
    Brightwell Ord(89) [semiorders, linear extensions];
    Fishburn & Woodall Ord(99) [cycle orders];
    Voutsadakis Ord(07)
      [n-ordered sets, completion];
    Besnard JGP(09) ["non-commutative" ordered spaces];
    Mayburov IJTP(10) [fuzzy ordered sets];
    Balof et al Ord(13) [representation polyhedron of a semiorder];
    Kornell et al a2101 [quantum posets].
  @ Generalized ordered spaces: Bennett et al Ord(01) [cleavability],
    T&A(05)
      [separability and  monotone Lindelöf property].
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  – other sites – acknowledgements
  send feedback and suggestions to bombelli at olemiss.edu – modified 28 jan 2021