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::Please don't: "closure" is a property of subsets, and there is no subset here. The fact that the result of the operation belongs to the group is a part of the definition of an operation. By the way, I have removed the use of "closure" in ]. ] (]) 15:00, 29 December 2021 (UTC) ::Please don't: "closure" is a property of subsets, and there is no subset here. The fact that the result of the operation belongs to the group is a part of the definition of an operation. By the way, I have removed the use of "closure" in ]. ] (]) 15:00, 29 December 2021 (UTC)
:::Thank you, ], for pointing out the discrepancy. I agree with ] that the best solution to the issue you raise is that closure should not be listed an axiom either for group or for abelian group. ] (]) 23:01, 29 December 2021 (UTC) :::Thank you, ], for pointing out the discrepancy. I agree with ] that the best solution to the issue you raise is that closure should not be listed an axiom either for group or for abelian group. ] (]) 23:01, 29 December 2021 (UTC)
:Including both left and right identity and inverse is very common mistake. The existence of the left identity and inverse can be proven using the right identity and inverse and vice versa. So it is sufficient to present only one of each in the list of the axioms. Here there are some proves, for example: https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/65239/right-identity-and-right-inverse-in-a-semigroup-imply-it-is-a-group ] (]) 00:06, 20 January 2023 (UTC)
::You are right that some of the axioms could be deduced from the others, but this is not a "mistake". The standard textbooks intentionally require the identity be a two-sided identity and so on, presumably because it is more natural not to favor one side. Therefore we should leave it as is. ] (]) 00:03, 23 January 2023 (UTC)


In a similar vein, I modified the leading sentence to mention that the binary operation is closed (defined on the set). Seeing as the original sentence didn't call it a "binary operation" and instead called it an "operation that combines any two elements to form a third element", I would argue that in order to make this expansion clear and precise, it's required to mention that the domains/codomain are all in the set. So therefore I modified it to "an operation that combines any two elements '''of the set''' to '''produce''' a third element '''of the set'''". ] (]) 06:58, 14 March 2022 (UTC) In a similar vein, I modified the leading sentence to mention that the binary operation is closed (defined on the set). Seeing as the original sentence didn't call it a "binary operation" and instead called it an "operation that combines any two elements to form a third element", I would argue that in order to make this expansion clear and precise, it's required to mention that the domains/codomain are all in the set. So therefore I modified it to "an operation that combines any two elements '''of the set''' to '''produce''' a third element '''of the set'''". ] (]) 06:58, 14 March 2022 (UTC)


== Featured Article == == Character table ==


I concerned that this article no longer meets the FA criteria. The are large sections of uncited text. Can this be resolved without a formal ]? --] (]) 11:09, 20 April 2021 (UTC) A major omission is any reference to ]s. These tables used extensively in chemistry: see, for example, "Chemical Applications of Group Theory", F.A. Cotton, 3rd. edn., 1990. ] (]) 08:47, 15 March 2022 (UTC)
:What sections, specifically, do you think require additional citation? ] (]) 04:05, 26 April 2021 (UTC)
::At least every paragraph.--] (]) 06:46, 26 April 2021 (UTC)
:::So, to be clear, this is a purely mechanical and syntactic imposition, completely divorced from any understanding of the content? It would be satisfied if we found a basic textbook on group theory and tacked it on as a footnote at the end of every paragraph? You do notice that the FA requirements emphasize that citations are needed "where appropriate", with a link that points to ], right? See in particular the "Subject-specific common knowledge" bullet point at that link. —] (]) 06:50, 26 April 2021 (UTC)
::::I'll nominate for ] and let the community decide.--] (]) 07:52, 26 April 2021 (UTC)
:::::To me this comes across as "I don't want to answer that so I'm going to do the most hostile thing I can". —] (]) 16:32, 26 April 2021 (UTC)
::::::You are mistaken. I chose not to answer your rude assertion about my understanding.--] (]) 16:36, 26 April 2021 (UTC)


== Indentation ==
This is an article that will have many paragraphs that fall squarely under the ''Subject-specific common knowledge'', so we will need a list of sentences that need citations. From a quick read, it seems the article has very good bones, and it shouldn't take much time to bring it up to modern FA standards.
A few points of improvement
* Standard Model not mentioned in the body
:: This seems to have been done by someone else already. ] (]) 09:42, 30 April 2021 (UTC)
* footnote a is a bit outdated, and is used to support that group theory impacts other fields, which isn't immediately clear
::I have updated it to 2020. <strike>In my understanding this is used to support that group theory is an active mathematical discpline, not how it impacts other fields. For that purpose this note is perfectly appropriate, IMO.</strike> ] (]) 10:53, 2 May 2021 (UTC)
::Ah, now I see it is used a second time. ] (]) 11:04, 2 May 2021 (UTC)
:::I've tweaked the article so that footnote is only used once, and now we point to the "Examples and applications" section to show how group theory has applications. ] (]) 21:02, 2 May 2021 (UTC)
* In the rightmost example below: with people reading on phones, this should be phrased differently (last example? May be too unclear)
:: Sorry, what is your objection here? ] (])
::: this one also has been taken care of :). ] (]) 19:28, 30 April 2021 (UTC)
Citations:
* Research is ongoing to simplify the proof of this classification -> cited to a 2004 study
:: Included a more up-to-date reference. ] (]) 19:11, 2 May 2021 (UTC)
* Kernel and image of group homomorphisms and the first isomorphism theorem address this phenomenon .. cn?
::I don't think this needs a citation: the kernel is the identity element if and only if a homomorphism is injective (see the subarticle). This is domain-specific standard knowledge, IMO. ] (]) 09:49, 30 April 2021 (UTC)
* I think some of the footnotes need citations: g, j, p
::Done for j. ] (]) 09:42, 30 April 2021 (UTC)
::Done for p. ] (]) 17:13, 30 April 2021 (UTC)
::Done for g. ] (]) 20:47, 2 May 2021 (UTC)
* The problem can be dealt with ... cn?
::I am not convinced this needs a specific citation. Basically you could name ''any'' (contemporary) book on Galois theory (such as the ones we do cite above). ] (]) 09:49, 30 April 2021 (UTC)
::: But Galois theory isn't standard knowledge for laypeople with a keen interest in mathematics (I quote ]: {{tq|Subject-specific common knowledge: Material that someone familiar with a topic, including laypersons, recognizes as true. Example (from Processor): "In a computer, the processor is the component that executes instructions."}}). Can it be found in simpler sources too? ] (]) 16:13, 3 May 2021 (UTC)
:::: I added a citation to a textbook chapter. ] (]) 03:35, 4 May 2021 (UTC)
* A presentation of a group can also be used to construct the Cayley graph .. cn?
::Citation added. ] (]) 20:35, 2 May 2021 (UTC)
* The various molecules and their properties .. cn ] (]) 18:48, 26 April 2021 (UTC)
:I added the Standard Model to an appropriate spot in the body text and rephrased the {{tq|rightmost example}} line. ] (]) 21:47, 26 April 2021 (UTC)
* Please add alt text to images for accessibility
:: Done. ] (]) 10:53, 2 May 2021 (UTC)
* There are many ]. With a technical topic as this, many are defensible, but please use ] to remove the improper ones. ] (]) 16:50, 27 April 2021 (UTC)
::Done for those where (IMO) the nuisance of the link outweighs the benefits. If you see some more that you specifically think should go, please let me know. ] (]) 09:42, 30 April 2021 (UTC)
:::I've removed a few more. Hope that works. ] (]) 19:35, 30 April 2021 (UTC)


Why are all the main section titles double indented ==title==? They should be single indented as the menu only shows 3 levels of indentation. Currently ====items==== are present in the article, but are not shown on the menu. This will require '''all''' indents to be changed in the text. ] (]) 10:48, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
Thanks, {{ul|Femkemilene}} for your comments. I have addressed some of them and will work on the remainder asap. ] (]) 09:42, 30 April 2021 (UTC)
: Brilliant, thanks for your swift work! ] (]) 16:13, 3 May 2021 (UTC) :See ]. ] (]) 11:46, 26 March 2022 (UTC)÷
:The sections of level 4 do not appear in the table of content because of the limit parameter in the template <nowiki>{{TOClimit|limit=3}}</nowiki> that appears at the end of the lead. This is a choice for having a table of content that is not too large. This choice may be discussed, but the table of content is already very large. ] (]) 12:03, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
Comments from my second read:
* The last sentence of the first paragraph of the lede is difficult to understand. I'm not sure whether splitting it in two is sufficient.
:: OK, I have rephrased this. ] (]) 18:50, 3 May 2021 (UTC)
::: I still find it too difficult, which is a disservice to the rest of the article. I'm unfortunately not great with prose, but I see two problems with "While these are familiar from many mathematical structures, such as number systems—for example, the integers endowed with the addition operation form a group—the formulation of the axioms is detached from the concrete nature of the group and its operation."
::: 1. such as and for example is quick succession makes it more difficult to read. I think leaving out "such as number systems" works, considering that "number systems" may not be familiar to everybody reading this. I can guess what it means, but not sure.
::: 2. ''the formulation of the axioms is detached from the concrete nature of the group and its operation.'' Not entirely sure what this is meant to say. ] (]) 19:06, 3 May 2021 (UTC)
::::Re 1. I have broken the sentence into two. I think leaving out number systems makes the lead less informative. The directly following example of the integers should convey enough implicit meaning about number systems to be OK here.
::::Re 2: this is meant to say that the group axioms don't make reference to the nature of the group elements, nor to "what" the group operation actually is. This is a critical piece of information. If you have a better way of saying this, let me know! ] (]) 20:51, 4 May 2021 (UTC)
:::::{{u|David Eppstein}}, could I have a third opinion here? I know a lot of your work is comprehensible, so wonder whether you can simplify or assure me it does not need simplifying. ] (]) 20:20, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
::::::Re 2, it might help to figure out what the concept to be conveyed here is. It could be that you can have groups in various contexts (e.g. S{{sub|3}} acting on {a,b,c} or {1,2,3} are both groups) or that all isomorphic groups are the same group (e.g. S{{sub|3}} acting on {a,b,c} or {1,2,3} are the same group). Or that everything that satisfies the axioms is a group (which it really seems to be saying), but that is kinda too implicit in the idea of what axioms are for to be using such abstruse language. If the latter, wouldn't "Any set and operation that satisfies the axioms is a group" be clearer? —] 20:54, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
:::::::I just came across this page, and came here to say that this sentence is very confusing to me (I am mathematician, familiar with groups, group actions, group representations, etc). Whatever exactly it is supposed to mean (Jakob.scholbach's explanation above did not clarify it for me), it seems it has to be an improperly constructed sentence: according to my reading it seems to implicitly suggest that the "concrete nature of the group and its operation" (I don't know what this means) has some manner of existence prior to the "formulation" (?) of the axioms. I assume we all agree that the opposite is the case. ] (]) 05:57, 15 February 2022 (UTC)
::::::::This is regarding the two sentences "{{tq|The formulation of the axioms is, however, detached from the concrete nature of the group and its operation. This allows one to handle entities of very different mathematical origins in a flexible way, while retaining essential structural aspects of many mathematical objects.}}", right? Material in the lead is supposed to be a summary of something. I suspect this is (or should be) thought of as a summary of the 19th-century notion of a group touched on in the History section and in more detail in ], from a time when groups were thought of in some specific formulation of what their elements should be and how they would combine (permutations and composition of permutations) rather than as anything obeying an abstract system of axioms. It's saying that the axiomatic point of view was an improvement because it allowed us to apply group theory more widely in a less cumbersome way rather than having to repeatedly translate one kind of group to another kind of group or re-prove the same theorems for every different kind of group. But if that's the intention, I don't think it expresses it very clearly. —] (]) 06:20, 15 February 2022 (UTC)
:::::::::Yes, that would make sense and would be good to communicate. It seems a little tricky to formulate clearly in an lead-appropriate way, unfortunately I don't have any good suggestion. ] (]) 06:27, 15 February 2022 (UTC)
* Should the quote from Borcherds be moved down? Those technical terms have not been introduced yet
:: It is true that the monster simple group has not introduced there (and is hardly introduced further down), but Borcherd's description "a huge and extraordinary mathematical object" strikes me as highly appropriate for a layman to grasp a bit of the depth out there... Other than that the quote talks just about the simplicity of these axioms, which is what this § is all about. I suggest leaving it there. ] (]) 18:50, 3 May 2021 (UTC)
* group table at the right -> check throughout for statements like this that don't make sense on phones (where that image is above the text). The majority of our readers now use mobile devices.
:: Done. ] (]) 18:50, 3 May 2021 (UTC)
::Found one more: if the hour hand is on 9 and is advanced 4 hours, it ends up on 1, as shown at the right. ] (]) 20:21, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
:::Fixed. ] (]) 13:03, 8 May 2021 (UTC)
* For example, group theory is used to show that optical transitions between certain quantum levels cannot occur simply because of the symmetry of the states involved. cn
::This is one of those things that's probably stated in some form in just about any intermediate quantum-physics book. I've added an older reference that I had at hand, and I'll poke around for a more recent one that seems particularly good. ] (]) 23:56, 3 May 2021 (UTC)
* For example, an element of the (2,3,7) triangle group acts on a triangular tiling of the hyperbolic plane by permuting the triangles, cn
::Done. —] (]) 03:53, 4 May 2021 (UTC)
* though the double bonds reduce this to pyritohedral symmetry, cn
:: I removed this second half of the sentence, none of the sources I looked at mentioned that. Added a ref. ] (]) 18:07, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
* rest of these images probs also need citations (mentioned above, but XOR'Easter's <small>(brilliant name)</small> response directly below may have caused confusion )
:: Added references. I pinged WP Chemistry about the JT-effect, will add one there, too. ] (]) 18:07, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
* the category of groups: I think this entire section is quite difficult, and uses terms that an applied mathematician won't be familiar with. I don't think it falls under domain-specific common knowledge. Can it be slightly simplified (what is a category?) and cited?
::I decided to trim this § down to a sentence which is now placed in the paragraph on homomorphisms. Elaborating on the notion of a category is IMO better left to articles where this has a stronger effect (e.g., for abelian groups). ] (]) 18:50, 3 May 2021 (UTC)
* footnote q needs updating
:: Why? The GAP small groups lists still the same number? ] (]) 18:50, 3 May 2021 (UTC)
::I think I may have misinterpreted what it says. So I was thinking, does a more modern source have "The groups of order at most 3000 are known"? From your comments it seems like there is a specific collection of groups, called the GAP small groups? Can that be clarified? ] (]) 19:12, 3 May 2021 (UTC)
:::] is software for doing group theory. It includes implementations of . I'm not clear on why this footnote would need updating; once the exhaustive search was done, it's done. ] (]) 23:49, 3 May 2021 (UTC)
::::Yes, the list of groups of order <= 2000 is complete (and the result is in a sense independent of who does it). GAP does not offer a list of groups of order up to 3000, as far as I have seen. Nor does any other site (according to a search I did the other day). In this sense, the citation is still up to date. ] (]) 06:54, 4 May 2021 (UTC)
:::::The wording still implies that group 2001 is unknown. Could it be reworded as: "Up to isomorphism, there are about 49 billion groups of order below or equal to 2000", or something in that sense? ] (]) 20:25, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
::::::I have reworded it slightly, but yes, in some sense it is true that groups of order 2001 (not the 2001st group though, this makes no sense) are "unknown" in the sense that there is (to the best of my knowledge) no list available listing them all. ] (]) 13:03, 8 May 2021 (UTC)
* a problem too hard to be solved in general (footnote r), needs updating?
:: Hm, this is a case where some problem is super-hard, and is known to be super-hard to anyone studying this. Therefore, researchers seem not to restate this too frequently again. At least I didn't find a more recent source for that. ] (]) 18:50, 3 May 2021 (UTC)
::: Thanks for trying. ] (]) 19:13, 3 May 2021 (UTC)
] (]) 16:13, 3 May 2021 (UTC)
* <s>Simons, Jack (2003) listed in specific references, but not used. ] (]) 20:26, 7 May 2021 (UTC)</s>
: It is referenced when talking about symmetry of Ammonia. ] (]) 13:03, 8 May 2021 (UTC)


== Restructuring article? ==
====HF====
Barging in here, from the FAR, if that's okay. I've never been taught group theory, so please bear with me when I say stupid things here.
* Is having terms such as ] in italics compliant with ]?
: MOS allows for italics for emphasizing things. Since associativity is such an important piece of this concept I believe it is worth highlighting it. Generally my feeling is that italicization is not used too excessively. ] (]) 13:03, 8 May 2021 (UTC)
* Do {{xt| It is generally preferred for computing with groups and for computer-aided proofs.}} and {{xt|It is also useful for talking of properties of the inverse operation, as needed for defining topological groups and group objects.}} need references?
: I have moved this § down to topological groups and added a ref for the second sentence you are asking about. I will check for the first later. ] (]) 13:03, 8 May 2021 (UTC)
* "Composition is a binary operation" - pretty sure this statement doesn't need to be italicized in the text
*:I think I've {{diff|Group_(mathematics)|1022013620|1022012267|addressed}} this. —] 23:11, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
* <s>"Via Euler angles, rotation matrices are used in computer graphics" - appears to be a sentence fragment</s>
** This makes sense to me now; I apparently lost my ability to read briefly. ] <sub> ]</sub> 23:00, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
*:I've {{diff|Group_(mathematics)|next|1022014051|made a change}} here; it was a little clumsy. —] 23:11, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
* Can we get a more exact citation for note a?
*:I {{diff|Group_(mathematics)|next|1022013620|clarified}} the wording a little; however, a citation for this claim would be appropriate. —] 23:11, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
:::I think having 1700 scientific papers published per year in some domain is quite aptly proving that this domain is active, no? I see absolutely no problem with this claim. ] (]) 13:06, 8 May 2021 (UTC)
::::I am uncomfortable with this on two levels. One: a high level of interpretation and judgement is needed to (a) classify papers and (b) to translate the number into a conclusion of how "active" the field is. In short, it is ] of the worst kind, even if you will not get many people disagreeing with the conclusion. It invites the query from a reader: "Are you sure?" Two: the number itself needs citation. It should not be claimed out of the blue. —] 13:52, 8 May 2021 (UTC)
:::::In all respect, I think the edit you made indicates that you are not very familiar with the situation here: Math Reviews is not a ''journal'' (as you wrote), but rather a service provided by the American Math Society (one of the, if not the most prestigious national mathematical societies). It lists all mathematical papers that have been peer-reviewed, contains secondary reviews of these papers, and contains their classifications into the several areas of maths. This information is in no way a synthesis of other knowledge that has been partly assembled here and there, it is simply a number that is out there. Questioning that 1700+ papers indicates a high level of activity strikes me as being a bit off.
:::::Finally about 2): of course we can include a link to the Mathscinet page, but I frankly don't quite see the need for that. It is (to anyone with a subscription to MSN) a trivially verifiable information. ] (]) 12:28, 9 May 2021 (UTC)
::::::You are presumably referring to . I took that it is described as a journal from the linked article '']''. Perhaps, since I lack the necessary familiarity, you should edit the description in both places?
::::::And I am not questioning that it is a high level of activity; I am looking at it from the perspective of a non-mathematician reading this: How does one get a sense of what the figure means when one has no reference, other than the claim made in WP's voice? In non-technical contexts and for schoolgoers, that might seem like a tiny number or an enormous number. Also, to cite the issue and page number that provides the mentioned list would not be strange. —] 16:13, 9 May 2021 (UTC)
:::::::Relatedly, although it is correct that ''Mathematical Reviews'' was a journal (of reviews), it stopped being published as a journal well before the date given in the note, and became a database, under the different name ]. I have corrected the note to reflect its name as of the referred-to date. —] (]) 19:42, 9 May 2021 (UTC)
::::::::I have included a link to the MSN page (again, there are no issues / page numbers, this is an electronic database). I continue to see absolutely no problem with taking a number of 1700+ papers as an indication that this branch is highly active. If that number wouldn't make it so evidently clear that it is a highly active branch, it would require us to give further references, but this is not the case here. ] (]) 20:04, 14 May 2021 (UTC)
* There's some sort of error in the citation "{{Harvard citations|nb=yes|year=2003|last1=Simons|loc=§4.2.1"
*:{{diff|Group_(mathematics)|1022012267|021998489|Fixed}}. —] 23:11, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
* Some of these books refs it would be nice to have page numbers, if possible to help with verifiability
*:I analyzed a few of these:
*:*General references for broad topics that do not need page numbers: Curtis 2003 (footnote 21), Weyl 1952 (footnote 50), Bishop 1993 (footnote 52), Mumford et al (footnote 63), Fulton & Harris (footnote 66), Serre 1977 (footnote 67), Rudin 1990 (footnote 68), Artin 1998 (footnote 70), Ronan 2007 (footnote 77), Husain 1966 (footnote 79)
*:*Has a page number, but in the full reference not the footnote and should probably be made more consistent: Bersuker 2006 (footnote 54)
*::: Done. ] (]) 09:56, 12 May 2021 (UTC)
*:*Needs page numbers: Welsh 1989 (footnote 62), Kurzweil & Stellmacher 2004 (footnote 74)
*::: Done for Kurzweil. Welsh does not mention the Mathieu group, so this might better be replaced by some other reference. ] (]) 09:56, 12 May 2021 (UTC)
*:*Can probably be replaced by a better reference: Lay (footnote 64), Kuipers (reference 65)
*:*Not sure whether needs pages: Shatz 1972 (footnote 81)
*::: Is OK, I think. ] (]) 09:56, 12 May 2021 (UTC)
*:—] (]) 21:50, 11 May 2021 (UTC)
Well, frankly, I understood little of this, so I may just be plain wrong on my comments. ] <sub> ]</sub> 22:05, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
:No worries, that's just alright. ] (]) 13:03, 8 May 2021 (UTC)


The edits to this ] on ] have been reverted. That was due partially to the misuse of indentation, see ]; but also changes to content must be supported by ], with inline citations. Wish-lists/prayers like <nowiki>{{Cotton&Wilkinson}}</nowiki> are of no use; instead the text book "Advanced Inorganic Chemistry. A Comprehensive Text by Cotton F.A., Wilkinson G. (3rd edition)" can be found and read. If this is to be comprehensible as an article on mathematics, there should be some attempt to reconcile the terminology of physical chemistry with the standard language of theoretical physics and mathematics. In the case of the section "Symmetry"—a brief overview of a general topic—there has so far been no consensus to create separate brand new sections. Here they were sometimes done by copy-pasting content from the section on "Symmetry"; deleting the content, cited to ], ] et al, or to ], was unhelpful; similarly for the citation to Graham Ellis.
== Formatting ==


As far as groups are concerned, ] and ] are often first encountered in undergraduate courses on finite groups and angular momentum in quantum mechanics (see e.g. the treatment by ]). Separate new sections at the moment seem to be ], with no ]. It unbalances the article. The new image without citations is unhelpful.
The article is a bit inconsistent w.r.t. formatting and in need of cleaning up, and it seems that we should get a consensus on format choices. Group-theoretic articles do not generally need fancy formatting, and often achieve a uniform look by using minimal HTML formatting, even forgoing LaTeX in stand-alone formulae, and sidestepping many of the problems associated with LaTeX. It is not a big deal to get this consistent with any given formatting choices, once these are settled. Some choices:
* Inline formulae: LaTeX or HTML?
* Standalone formulae: LaTeX or HTML?
* HTML formatting: {{tl|math}} or {{tl|nowrap}}?
* Known set symbols (reals, rationals, etc.): bold or blackboard bold? (Blackboard bold is not really acceptable in HTML: it creates a nasty mess of sizing in some common browsers. So either avoid BB or use LaTeX here as an exception in HTML.)
* Specific elements of sets: italic or roman?
—] 12:47, 4 May 2021 (UTC)
:It is bad practice to choose different formats for inline vs standalone formulas, because then the variables have different appearances and usually in mathematics different appearances of the same letters are a marker that they have different meanings. This intentional use of different meanings for different formats can be seen already in this article's "Second example: a symmetry group" section, where we have both a roman c (representing a counter-diagonal reflection) and an italic c (representing an arbitrary group element). So since we have some formulas that are too complex for non-LaTeX formatting, for instance the one in the "Galois groups" section, I think we should make them all LaTeX to make the formatting more consistent than it is now. The math templates try to mimic LaTeX appearance but just don't succeed, and plain-html formatting is right out. I also prefer blackboard bold for the symbols that can be formatted that way; I think that's more standard these days and it makes clear that those symbols have a specific meaning. As for "specific elements of sets: italic or roman": I think you are seeing an inconsistency where there is none. We are using roman for specific geometric operations whose roman letters stand for the name of the operation, and italic for abstract elements of sets; that is deliberate and a good use of distinctions in notation to make distinctions in meaning. —] (]) 16:06, 4 May 2021 (UTC)
::On "specific elements of sets: italic or roman", there was inconsistency until I recently made changes to this, and am checking whether consensus is aligned with this. I'll wait for more comments, though I think perhaps I've stirred up a hornet's nest. —] 17:01, 4 May 2021 (UTC)
:::Yes, the article was (and still is) inconsistent. When we had every math bit formatted as ordinary text (italics for variables, '''R''' for reals), except where this was not possible or not reasonably possible. This was reasonably consistent and looks acceptable. Then, apparently some editor thought "let's make it better", and forgot to go all the way down to the end. Now, the majority of math symbols is formatted using the math template (except where this is not possible), which also looks OK to me.
:::My conclusion is that the minimally invasive thing would be to replace all italics by { { math ... } } templates.
:::I personally (apparently contrary to David's preference) am not at all in favour of displaying every stupid math symbol by LateX, this breaks a lot of the reading flow. ] (]) 20:41, 4 May 2021 (UTC)
::::Well, the likelihood that someone would express a contrary opinion is one reason I didn't just rush ahead and do it the way I would prefer. —] (]) 04:54, 5 May 2021 (UTC)
:::::Yeah, this stupid formatting is a safe way to enrage everybody involved... That said, I don't have a strong opinion. As long as it is uniform I'm OK with pretty much anything. ] (]) 14:08, 5 May 2021 (UTC)
::::::I think I'll leave it be until some consensus is apparent. I'm a little surprised, given that this is nominally a FA. —] 14:19, 5 May 2021 (UTC)
:::::::Well, 2008 was plenty long enough ago for inconsistencies to creep in. I'm in the "make them all LaTeX" camp with {{u|David Eppstein}}, I think. ] (]) 15:43, 5 May 2021 (UTC)
(unindent) OK. What about this compromise?:
we use LateX for
:* all stand-alone expressions,
:* <strike>all inline expressions involving sub/superscripts (":..., ''a''<sup>−3</sup>, ''a''<sup>−2</sup>, ''a''<sup>−1</sup>, ''a''<sup>0</sup> = ''e'', ''a'', ''a''<sup>2</sup>, ''a''<sup>3</sup>, ...,")</strike>
:* all inline expressions using other "serious" notation e.g. <math>\mathbb Z</math> etc.
We use html for
:* inline symbols that can just as well be rendered using html ("For each ''a'' in ''G'', there exists an element ''b'' in ''G'' ...)?
I don't really see the point in using Latex for those. ] (]) 08:57, 6 May 2021 (UTC)
:I have uniformized the notation in removing all {{tl|math}} templates (and replacing them by {{tl|nowrap}} where needed). I have replaced the '''Z''' by <math>\mathbb Z</math> etc. Some of the stand-alone formulas are not yet in Latex, I will do this soon. ] (]) 18:44, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
::You might want to consider the formatting of "literal" elements. For example, ''f''{{sub|c}} versus f{{sub|c}}. —] 19:40, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
:::I still think that we should make an effort to make <math>f</math> in displayed formulas look the same as the ''f'' in inline formulas, which html (as you can see in this sentence) does not even come close to. If you insist on not making everything &lt;math&gt;, at least use the {{tl|math}} templates rather than plain html: {{math|''f''}}. Jakob.scholbach's removal of the math templates is in this regard a horrible step backwards. If you're going that far, why not <pre>write everything in monospaced ascii instead of even using formatted text</pre>? —] (]) 21:21, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
::::I agree that the difference is more marked than ideal. Regarded on its own, that is easily solved (make standalone formatting as for inline, with the single awkward example of the quadratic root equation handled separately; the actual formula's relevance is too obscure anyway, so could be removed). I deliberately am staying away from actually expressing a preference; I am just observing that one can achieve consistency of format fairly easily in an article such as this, since it can get away without fancy formulae if we wish (as do many abstract algebra articles). —] 21:40, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
:::::It's not just that the html formatting is horribly inconsistent with the displayed-math formatting (although it is). Other problems with the html formatting include bad spacing around operations and relations (too wide around the centered dot, too narrow around equality; too close to variable in "b/a" in "Division" section), a centered dot that in my default rendering is so tiny that it can barely be seen (the one in the math template is better) and a raised circle for composition that cannot be distinguished from a centered dot, greater likelihood of forgetting to italicize variables (there currently is a roman f in "Second example: a symmetry group", for instance); insufficient distinction from article text (visible most clearly in the phrase "an element a in a group G"; there are also some examples where the text is italic, exactly matching the variables); inability to show nesting of parentheses more clearly by varying their sizes (fortunately the examples here are small, "Φ(φ(g))": whose brilliant idea was it to use a roman and italic phi for inverse homomorphisms?). —] (]) 00:33, 8 May 2021 (UTC)
::::::I guess any such discussion will quickly open Pandora's box. I believe there are arguments in favor of any of the several options. This is, probably, why ] says "For inline formulae, such as a2 − b2, the community of mathematical editors of English Misplaced Pages currently has no consensus about preferred formatting". Everyone has their opinion, and is entitled to their opinion. My personal opinion is based on the fact that it looks quite OK in my browser, and that the article passed FA scrutiny with such a formatting.
::::::{{ul|David Eppstein}}, if you have such a strong opinion about this, would you be willing to change the entire article to Latex? As I said earlier, I don't personally really like it (people who compare it to the usual Latex typesetting process are usually neglecting that in a usual math paper the text and the formulae are rendered using the same font, which is not at all the case if we use Latex here). But in the interest of a reasonably productive editing on the article, I wouldn't dig my heels in. It is just that someone needs to do that work. I don't see the clear benefit of having Latex all over the place (on the contrary), so I won't commit to such a time-consuming edit which is not forced upon us by MOS. If others have a strong opinion either way, go ahead (''but only do it if you do it all the way through''). ] (]) 07:20, 8 May 2021 (UTC)
:::::::If there's consensus to make this change I'm willing to put in the effort, but I probably won't have time until this Sunday. —] (]) 07:22, 8 May 2021 (UTC)
::::::::LaTeX is neater within itself, but does not embed well into the surrounding text. HTML does not work well for expressing math, but formats coherently with the surrounding text. Compounded by WP defaulting to an arbitrary browser font, we have that every compromise is poor, inviting disagreement and instability. If a stable consensus on the chosen style can be clearly recorded (e.g. at the top of the talk page of the article), I think editors of all stripes will put in the effort to conform the article to that style. —] 12:52, 8 May 2021 (UTC)
@{{ul|David Eppstein}}: IMO, go ahead. (I would probably suggest trying it out first with the table of group elements, where it might create quite some bigger width.) ] (]) 12:15, 9 May 2021 (UTC)


The edits today to the article are a combination of vandalism, incompetence and ]: why delete references to physicists or ]; why delete images from the section on "Symmetry"; why favour chemistry above physics? Here are diffs of recent problematic edits, including today's. ] (]) 14:12, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
== cref/cnote templates ==
:I think this is overly harsh. You were right to revert the changes, but that's because we should be conservative with FAs. But there were not CIR-level problems with the changes proposed. If this was not FA quality, I'd say this is what we should expect from the BRD cycle. Additionally, I think there is a problem with the article that I rasied during the FA process that it does not make enough of the applications outside mathematics. While the concept might fundamentally be a mathematical one, its most exciting applications lie in chemistry and physics and the article should not assume that the interest of the reader primarily comes from mathematics. &mdash; ] <small>]</small> 14:19, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
:::It was in an unacceptable state, given the last diff. In physics, the group-theoretic approach to quantum mechanics and ] can be traced back to Weyl, Heisenberg, Schrödinger, Wigner, von Neumann, M.H. Stone, Dirac, Bargmann and Harish-Chandra (cf Wiener's 1933 Cambridge book or Mackey's Chicago and Oxford lecture notes). Specific examples of character tables are undue here, compared to the character formulas of Frobenius, Schur and Weyl (which have been widely applied in theoretical physics and mathematics). Charles Stewart is completely correct that the section can be improved, but that should be done in an incremental way. ] is encyclopedic and explained clearly on the tables in mathematics, physics and chemistry (230 cases); mathematically, ] covers the 32 ]s. It describes the ] from a mathematical standpoint; and is explained in standard text books on chemistry & group theory (e.g. "Chemical Applications of Group Theory", ]). ] (]) 16:43, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
:::*I'll note that, independently of Petergans's motives for changing the history section, we have failed to have any women in that section in the the maths FA where there would be least tokenism in avoiding that failing. Noether's contributions are as worthy of mention as anyone in the last three sentences of the penultimate paragraph, which currently reads: "As of the 20th century, groups gained wide recognition by the pioneering work of Ferdinand Georg Frobenius and William Burnside, who worked on representation theory of finite groups, Richard Brauer's modular representation theory and Issai Schur's papers. The theory of Lie groups, and more generally locally compact groups was studied by Hermann Weyl, Élie Cartan and many others. Its algebraic counterpart, the theory of algebraic groups, was first shaped by Claude Chevalley (from the late 1930s) and later by the work of Armand Borel and Jacques Tits.". &mdash; ] <small>]</small> 18:47, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
::::* Ah, ]. The finite generation of invariants of finite groups goes back to Felix Klein ("Lectures on the Icosahedron"), David Hilbert and Emmy Noether (1916). Her short, elementary and constructive proof is presented in Weyl's "The Classical Groups, Their Invariants and Representations" (Pages 275–276, 2nd edition). I don't believe it can be found on wikipedia. OTOH {{noping|R.e.b.}} gave Hilbert's non-constructive proof using the averaging or Reynolds operator. ] (]) 20:42, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
::The reversion is very disappointing. The uses of group theory in chemistry are extensive and were properly documented with references to relevant books. Symmetry in molecules is an essential part of the undergraduate curriculum in chemistry. For example ] cannot be taught without reference to symmetry operations. The designations of many point groups are illustrated at ], which is why the original diagrams were removed. The example of vibrations in methane illustrated the importance of group theory in relation to spectroscopy. For these reasons, I split the original section, without changing anything in the general part, and amplifying the chemical applications, albeit very briefly. The reversion should be undone so that the new material can be properly discussed, if needed. ] (]) 15:13, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
::*While it's natural to be disappointed when changes you've put substantial work into are rejected, my impression is that you lack experience of FA-quality editing. That's OK - little of post-high-school science is FA quality on WP - and I think the impulse behind your changes are OK, but you need to accept that getting agreement to changes to the article will be harder than you are used to. If you still think that you want to invest the time in achieving structural changes to the article, I recommend you put in some time and familiarise yourself with the changes that were made to the article over the last year, which has seen quite a big change in the degree of conformance with the style guide due to the push to get the article to FA level. &mdash; ] <small>]</small> 18:23, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
::I agree with all of Charles Stewart's comments. Since article is FA, before making such edits it is good to discuss on talk page first. ] (]) 15:25, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
OK, so be it. This means that, for people like me, the article is sub-standard and should never have been promoted to FA. I've checked with a number of chemistry texts (University level) and they all have something about symmetry; most include or discuss applications that depend on the use of point group character tables. The applications don't belong in the same place as the theory (as is the case at present). For me, that means that this discussion is now closed. ] (]) 20:11, 26 March 2022 (UTC)


== Groups as categories ==
The {{tl|cref}} / {{tl|cnote}} system of templates seems to be painful, and I suggest that it should be replaced: we have better ways of doing this, at the cost of having the notes in the text stream (which we already have for references). In particular:
* Hovering over the note tag does ''not'' seem to show the text of the note in a pop-up. You actually have to click on it to navigate to the note to read it. Unnecessarily painful for the reader and unnecessarily disruptive to reading flow.
* The correspondence between reference and the note has to be maintained in two different places, and is a maintenance headache. For example, tags , , do not exist, leaving three unreferenced notes.
* Sequencing is a maintenance headache. Keeping alphabetic sequence corresponding to the text sequence, avoiding gaps in the sequence, dealing with re-ordering the text, avoiding duplicate tags – unless we don't care (except for the last point: duplicate tags cannot be used).
Or does someone have a different perspective? —] 21:12, 7 May 2021 (UTC)
: Hm, I agree it is a bit prone to rot... What template would you suggest instead? ] (]) 13:09, 8 May 2021 (UTC)
:: {{tl|efn}} with {{tl|notelist}} seems to work well. See an example in '']''. There are also related templates such as {{tl|sfn}} that seem to be compact equivalents of {{tl|harvard citations}} that we already use, though there is no need to change these. —] 14:10, 8 May 2021 (UTC)
:::OK, that looks better. I started implementing this change - would you be willing to help out with some more? Thanks! (Please don't delete the ones that are not referenced, those should be reinserted at appropriate spots in most cases, I believe.) ] (]) 15:33, 8 May 2021 (UTC)
::::Yes, no problem. I don't promise that it will be immediate, but I'll probably complete this within a few days. —] 01:36, 9 May 2021 (UTC)
::::Done. That was quicker than I expected. —] 02:18, 9 May 2021 (UTC)
:Thanks! I reintegrated two that still made sense, and removed one that was never used. ] (]) 12:13, 9 May 2021 (UTC)


I feel that the "category" point of view is missing : a group <math>G</math> can be seen as a category <math>A_G</math> with 1 objeect (call it <math>a</math>) where elements <math>g \in G</math> corresponds to isomorphisms <math>f_g : a \to a</math>, and so that composition goes well. The reason why I didn't do the changes myself is that I don't know where to put it, or if it could only be a redirection to the (quite scarce) examples from ], in which case I would try and extend these. ] (]) 14:47, 1 November 2022 (UTC)
== Reliability of Becchi ==
:Good idea! I tried to implement your suggestion, by adding it to the discussion of groupoids in the Generalizations section. ] (]) 18:42, 1 November 2022 (UTC)


== Identity and also inverse elements must be part of set ==
Is Becchi "Introduction to Gauge Theories" a reliable source? It seems to have been published only on arXiv, and that's not peer-reviewed. —] (]) 20:50, 9 May 2021 (UTC)
:The claim is covered by the standard textbook referenced at the end of the next sentence, so I removed the Becchi citation. ] (]) 23:37, 9 May 2021 (UTC)


Note to 100.36.106.199 who removed (2 days ago) my words "the set contains an identity element" and returned to the previous wording "an identity element exists": The point is that it is not sufficient for an identity element to exist; it must be part of the set or else the set does not constitute a group.
== math display=block ==


Consider the first example: the integers under addition. If we consider the set without the identity element zero: ..., -3, -2, -1, +1, +2, +3, +4, ... then we have a set which is NOT a group. Zero still exists but it has to be included in the group.
The markup <code><nowiki><math display=block></nowiki></code> behaves a bit poorly, very slightly on a computer browser, but more markedly on a mobile phone browser. In particular, vertical spacing before and after seems to be erratic and quite different from that on a normal browser, including that a single blank line (normally no effect) before or after it has quite a marked effect. I suggest that we stick to the better-behaved <code><nowiki>:<math></nowiki></code>. —] 17:45, 10 May 2021 (UTC)
:Using colons for indentation violates accessibility guidelines (]) and is discouraged by ]. The display=block markup is intended to provide a more-accessible way of formatting mathematics displays. The blank lines have an affect because (unlike :-indentation) it matters whether the displayed block is part of a surrounding paragraph or stands alone as its own paragraph. I suggest we stick to the guideline-approved and accessible display=block. In particular, part of the featured article criteria include following style guidelines, and these are style guidelines that we should be following. —] (]) 17:56, 10 May 2021 (UTC)
::Okay, whatever. It is possibly just a quirk of the browser I'm using, as widespread as Safari on mobile is. I'll just have to put it down to another of those things where WP formatting just does weird things, I guess. Which just is another thing to dampen enthusiasm for getting things in WP nicely polished. —] 18:16, 10 May 2021 (UTC)
:::I agree both that mathematics formatting on Misplaced Pages is subpar compared even to ten years ago on the rest of the web, and that the vertical spacing around display=block math is not right. But I think it's the best we can do under the circumstances. The Wikimedia developers have a long-term pattern of being incredibly unresponsive to these issues, and of actively discouraging local efforts to work around them. —] (]) 18:20, 10 May 2021 (UTC)
::::We seem to be on the same page there. I guess keeping the HTML semantics correct, notwithstanding formatting quirks, is probably a worthwhile objective. —] 18:28, 10 May 2021 (UTC)


As for requiring parallelism in wording for identity element and inverse elements, I actually agree that the wording should be parallel. So I will now make it parallel by adding that the inverse elements also must be part of the group (although you said you hoped not). Again for the integers under addition: the set 0, +1, +2, +3, +4, ... is NOT a group without the negative integers. The fact that they exist is not sufficient. ] (]) 02:01, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
== <code><nowiki><math></nowiki></code> on mobile devices ==
{{tracked|T129054}}
I've just noticed that the <code><nowiki><math></nowiki></code> markup in footnotes displays as blank white boxes on a mobile device (or at least on Safari on iPhone). We'll have to abandon this markup in that context. —] 17:52, 10 May 2021 (UTC)
:It looks fine for me on the Android app. Are you sure this is a widespread and long-term issue and not just an issue with your particular setup or something that we could reasonably expect to be fixed? —] (]) 18:00, 10 May 2021 (UTC)
::I am using the latest on iPhone. As such, it may be universal on all iPhones and thus most likely widespread with probably no known fix date (it would depend on Apple), but I have not checked. It would be helpful if other editors with Safari on iPhones could give feedback on this. —] 18:07, 10 May 2021 (UTC)
:::Math markup seems unavoidable in extended footnote L as written ("{{tq|The same is true for any ] ''F'' instead of <math>\mathbb Q</math>.}}") because of the use of blackboard bold. The html/template/unicode substitutes for that are so badly inconsistent across browsers that ] now explicitly discourages their use. —] (]) 18:14, 10 May 2021 (UTC)
::::It seems that this problem appears in many browsers: I have tried Mozilla Firefox, Edge and Brave all on Windows 10, plus Safari on iOS 14, all with the same effect. Navigate to https://en.m.wikipedia.org/Group_(mathematics)#Definition and then select the footnote (click or tap) at the end of the first paragraph. All the <code><nowiki><math></nowiki></code> comes out as blank rectangles. We have one negative datapoint for the Android app. Was this to the .m. site? —] 17:30, 11 May 2021 (UTC)
:::::It was the Android Misplaced Pages app. An app, not a site. I can see the problem you describe for popups on footnotes on the mobile site in an ordinary browser on an ordinary computer. The footnotes themselves are rendered just fine at the bottom of the article. The problem is not in the footnotes at the bottom of the article, but only in the appearance when you click on them and get a popup. The problem appears to be that the math markup is rendered as black text on a transparent background and that the popup uses white text on a black background, causing the math to become invisible. —] (]) 17:54, 11 May 2021 (UTC)
::::::Turns out to be a bug known and listed as a bug for five years. I think the snail-like progress is another example of the Wikimedia developers' poor prioritization of acceptable mathematics rendering. —] (]) 18:06, 11 May 2021 (UTC)
:::::::Thanks for digging that out and clarifying it. I'll leave it be, since it is nothing new. —] 18:12, 11 May 2021 (UTC)
:Incidentally, there is another math rendering bug that seems to be even lower priority for the developers: in mobile view, if you tap on an image to go to a full-screen view of the image, math in the caption is rendered incorrectly ({{phab|T263572}}). —] (]) 18:14, 11 May 2021 (UTC)


:Your example is incoherent: the object you have presented is not a set with an operation on it (because what is -1 + 1?). Assuming you had not made this error, you would be wrong that an identity exists: the operation is defined (only) on the set, things outside the set cannot be combined using the operation with things in the set and so in particular they cannot be an identity or an inverse. --] (]) 13:49, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
== Modular arithmetic ==
:I mean, it is true that students first learning abstract algebra suffer from the confusion that you are expressing here. But I think it is instructive that the first time you made the change, you did not even notice that the same argument applies to inverses as to the identity. That's because the meaning is not actually ambiguous or otherwise problematic. --] (]) 13:52, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
:Having said all that: the revised wording seems fine. --] (]) 13:54, 10 July 2023 (UTC)


== Undefined terms and notational elements ==
There's been a bit of back-and-forth on the modular arithmetic section lately, which in light of the FAR I thought worth discussing here. Before the FAR, it discussed the modular arithmetic operations as acting on the numbers <math>0</math> through <math>n-1</math>. Someone recently tried changing the elements being operated on to be equivalence classes of numbers, with a cumbersome notation for distinguishing them from the numbers they represent. Then another variation kept the equivalence classes but discussed them in terms of their "representants" (why not representatives, a much more common word with the same meaning?). I have restored something more like the original version, which performs the arithmetic directly on representatives and doesn't mention equivalence classes at all (although it does mention the equivalence relation from which the classes come). Using equivalence classes as group elements is not in any way a more rigorous treatment of this topic; all one needs is a clear statement that one is using a modified arithmetic operation on numbers that differs from the usual addition and multiplication operations by reducing to representatives. The use of equivalence classes makes the treatment both unnecessarily detailed and unnecessarily ], something I think we should be trying to avoid in a featured article. Equivalence classes may be preferred in some modern treatments aimed at mathematics students because of its symmetry (avoiding the need to choose representatives) or because using equivalence classes makes the proofs of associativity etc more direct, but those are not good reasons for preferring them here. In fact, from the advanced mathematical point of view equivalence classes come with some unwanted baggage of their own (far beyond the scope of this article): handling them involves second order arithmetic while there is no reason to go beyond first order merely to define modular arithmetic.


The statements about injective homomorphisms use several notational elements that have not been introduced previously and that will not be intuitive to a general reader: <math>\stackrel{\sim}{\to}</math>, <math>\hookrightarrow</math>, and <math>\ker \phi</math>.
Relatedly, a comment by ] in an edit summary suggested that, aside from this issue, the modular arithmetic section is overly detailed, and that it could be trimmed while directing readers to the main article for the missing detail. I tend to agree, but rather than just slashing it myself I thought it would be better to discuss here first. My suggestion would be to cut the detailed justification for why the multiplicative group is a group (everything after footnote except for the final sentence of the section about notation and applications); what do others think? —] (]) 00:55, 14 May 2021 (UTC)


The latter also appears in the Presentations section, along with reference to the free group
:The section is almost entirely redundant with the cyclic group section that follows it; its merit is that the additive group in modular arithmetic might be a familiar manifestation of the finite cyclic groups, and this can be conveyed in a mention in the next section. My inclination is to have the article only point out that modular addition corresponds to the finite cyclic groups with a link (the multiplicative group of a ring being too involved for those it is intended to help), and maybe keep the clock diagram for those who need a picture. Others may think differently from me. —] 02:30, 14 May 2021 (UTC)
:If one wants a less radical approach, defining a "+<sub>mod ''n''</sub>" operation on an actual set of integers {{mset|0, ..., ''n''−1}} is what people are familiar with from programming and is rigorous. Maybe closer to what David has in mind. —] 14:46, 14 May 2021 (UTC)
::I didn't have the time to follow the recent edits in that section closely, but what we currently have strikes me as the correct approach. Equivalence classes should be kept to an absolute minimum.
::About trimming this: I am decidedly against that idea. Yes, for a pro reader this is entirely redundant. On the other hand, the purpose of the modular arithmetic section is to tell people "you already know this concept, maybe without knowing its name". The purpose of the cyclic group section is to turn the screw one turn more, by embedding what people (likely) know into a bigger, and more abstract context. In my mind these two sections are an example of a well-done pedagogical approach, and the length we spend there is not in vain. ] (]) 18:58, 14 May 2021 (UTC)
:::I'm confused. "]": a 'pedagogical approach' is expressly not the style in WP. —] 19:22, 14 May 2021 (UTC)
::::Well, I'm not advocating writing a text-book (and this is not what the article is doing). I'm just pointing out that the arrangement of the material is a very reasonable choice from a perspective of someone who doesn't know these things yet.
::::You could make the same objection to the very first section about the integers, the symmetry group and the definition: in a way this is highly repetitive, basically repeating itself three times. Yet, this is on purpose, and BTW was very much requested throughout the FA process. (Take a look at the FA nomination discussions, if you want to convince yourself!). ] (]) 19:29, 14 May 2021 (UTC)
:::::Many mathematics articles on WP are not a useful encyclopedic reference because they did not think about the reader. Presenting facts is difficult if you're not allowed to explain the context. I agree with keeping this simple, without equivalence classes. ] (]) 19:36, 14 May 2021 (UTC)
::::::@Jakob.scholbach: Cyclic groups are simpler to introduce than is modular arithmetic. Those who are not familiar with the latter would be better introduced to this via the former. I would advocate introducing the cyclic groups and then take the approach of "but hey, you know these already in the form of addition in modular arithmetic."
::::::@Femkemilene: We're all agreed on presenting the information in the simplest form possible, just not at the expense of accuracy. No-one is arguing to bring back the description through equivalence groups. I would like to see the terms "equivalent" and "representative" removed entirely. I suggested an approach to do so above. —] 20:04, 14 May 2021 (UTC)
:::::::I firmly disagree with the idea that cyclic groups are easier than modular arithmetic. Cyclic groups require to first know groups, then internalize what it means to take iterated powers and then get an idea "what that actually means". Modular arithmetic needs ordinary arithmetic, and the process of division with remainder. ] (]) 20:08, 14 May 2021 (UTC)
:::::::Needless to conclude which one is easier! ] (]) 20:09, 14 May 2021 (UTC)
::::::::The concept of the possible rotations of a ''n''-gon that leave it the same, visualized through equally spaced points on a circle with a reference point (or else directed arcs starting at one point)? One does not need any understanding of groups to understand this. —] 22:17, 14 May 2021 (UTC)
:::::::::I agree that I think geometric examples are easier than those arithmeic-based examples where you need machinery to describe the operations. We almost have the group of rotations on the square in the article already: it is the subgroup of the symmetry group we give as our second example that you get by removing reflections. &mdash; ] <small>]</small> 01:17, 15 May 2021 (UTC)
*I haven't yet formed an opinion on which presentation I think is better for the article, but I want to push back on {{u|David Eppstein}}'s argument "In fact, from the advanced mathematical point of view equivalence classes come with some unwanted baggage of their own (far beyond the scope of this article): handling them involves second order arithmetic while there is no reason to go beyond first order merely to define modular arithmetic" - this 'baggage' is trivial, just sets of numbers (and if you care about such things, primitive recursive sets at that). It's not second-order logic, it's two-sorted first-order logic. I think this comes from a view that single-sorted logic is 'simpler' than multisorted logic, but I think that is an old-fashioned view, and one with baggage of its own. &mdash; ] <small>]</small> 00:59, 15 May 2021 (UTC)
::Re Quondum: I think you are mixing up the complexity of two things:
::*the symmetry group consisting of rotations of an n-gon
::*the general concept of a cyclic group
::I tend to agree that the 1st point is somewhat easier to understand than modular arithmetic. As Charles points out, this would not go far beyond what we have in the intro. (Just having rotations in the intro would mean we end up with an abelian group, which is unrepresentative.)
::The notion of a cyclic group (2nd point) ''is'' certainly more abstract and thus more advanced than modular arithmetic: the latter admits a complete, non-fuzzy description accessible for everyone knowing about division. By contrast, you can't even say ''what'' a cyclic group is (in a way that is not just listing Z/n-style and Z-style examples) without knowing what a group is. This is not a reason to avoid talking about cyclic groups, but it is a good reason to introduce (in a reasonable depth) an example of an (otherwise also important) group that eventually serves as an example for a more advanced notion. ] (]) 21:04, 15 May 2021 (UTC)
:::What precisely you are saying eludes me. Do you feel that replacing the modular addition prelude to cyclic groups with the ''n''-gon symmetry example would be an improvement? I never was suggesting that we replace the more abstract description of cyclic groups. —] 01:40, 16 May 2021 (UTC)
::::I have been contesting the idea that cyclic groups are simpler than modular arithmetic. The net effect of this assessment on the article is that modular arithmetic should (continue to) precede cyclic groups.
::::More generally, these sections there are IMO well in place, and I see no need in changing anything there. ] (]) 13:15, 16 May 2021 (UTC)


== What is the fundamental group of a plane minus a point? ==
It seems to me that the modular arithmetic example should be moved up as the "Second example," with the current second example made a third. The current second example section is tedious and hard to read. I wonder how many FAR reviewers went through it in detail. Modular arithmetic, by contrast is easy to grasp, particularly with the clock example. In my experience it is almost universally given as a first example of a group that differs from the ordinary forms of arithmetic (integers, rationals, reals). Moving it up would not alter the overall size of the article, just make it easier to understand. And I don't think we EVER need to worry about Misplaced Pages math articles being too easy to understand.--] (]) 15:36, 21 January 2022 (UTC)
"The fundamental group of a plane minus a point (bold) consists of loops around the missing point. This group is isomorphic to the integers."
I know very little about groups that I didn't learn from this page... but... the integers are a set, not a group, right? So "isomorphic to the integers" is a vague way of saying "isomorphic to some group that has the integers as the underyling set"? <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 08:21, 3 October 2023 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


:In this case, the relevant group is the integers under the addition operation. –] ] 17:24, 3 October 2023 (UTC)
== TFA nomination ==
: The given quote could be considered incorrect: the ] consists of loops and the fundamental group crucially consists of ''equivalence classes'' of loops. The main text avoids this by saying that "elements of the fundamental group are represented by loops" which is perfectly correct but maybe overly evasive or obscure for most readers. Also, the loops don't have to go around the missing point - they just have to avoid it.
: There's also the problem that the blue and orange curves in the image don't show two elements of the fundamental group: they show two different (free homotopy classes of) maps from the circle into the space. A loop representing the fundamental group has (although usually only implicitly) a fixed base point, and these two loops obviously have no common base point. So the picture is not quite illustrative of the fundamental group, even though any reader already familiar with the concepts can easily see what it's trying to communicate.
: Being fully precise would obviously not be desirable in the context of the page, but perhaps a talented writer could find a way to rephrase the paragraph and image/image caption in a way that remains concise and readable but is also fully accurate. (I'm not talented enough.) Maybe it would help to move the paragraph to its own subsection "algebraic topology" or "fundamental group". ] (]) 19:31, 3 October 2023 (UTC)
::Looking at this picture, I agree it's weird. We probably instead want something like the pictures in {{slink|Winding_number#Intuitive_description}}. –] ] 19:37, 3 October 2023 (UTC)
::@] I tried rewriting the explanation here. Is that any clearer? –] ] 22:13, 3 October 2023 (UTC)


== One can show that ==
I have nominated this article to run as ] for an unspecified date. Editors may join the discussion for this nomination at ]. ] (]) 20:04, 17 January 2022 (UTC)


@]: I removed the bold text from "...assuming associativity and the existence of a left identity and a left inverse for each element , '''one can show that''' every left inverse is also a right inverse of the same element as follows.", which you reverted with the comment "It must be clear that a proof is behind the assetrion". I do not understand the need for including "one can show that". Of course it has been shown. That is the reason we know it is true. Is there a way it could be true without having been shown to be true? ] (]) 13:20, 26 May 2024 (UTC)
== Short Description ==
{{ping|Imaginatorium}} I saw you reverted my edit of the short description. My edit removed content, but it was in-line with the purpose of the short description, see ]. I made a few such edits recently and there is currently a discussion over in the ] where I elaborate on my reasoning. To summarize here: the purpose of the short description is to briefly indicate the field covered by the article, and (]) not to define the subject of the article. Notable examples exhibiting a similar degree of brevity include "American baseball player" for ] or "U.S. State" for ]. Feel free to add to the ] if you wish to. Whether or not you agree with me, your opinion is welcome. ] (]) 11:24, 21 January 2022 (UTC)
:{{u|Donko XI}} changed the short description from "Algebraic structure with one binary operation" to "Algebraic structure", and this was reverted by {{u|Imaginatorium}}. I support {{u|Donko XI}}'s change for the following reasons. The previous short description is slighty too long (45 characters instead of the recommended limit of 40), but this is not the main reason for supporting the change. The aim of a short description is to allow readers to decide whether they may be interested in the article without open it. So the useful information is firstly that this is mathematics (this is already disambiguated in the article title), and to say which kind of mathematical object is the subject of the article (here, algebraic structure). Adding other details could be useful only if one could, in very few words, give an accurate definition, or, at least, disambiguate from other algebraic structures. This seems impossible. Moreover, emphasizing on the number of operations is wrong (the integers form a group that has another binary operation, the multiplication), and does not allow distinguishing groups from, say, monoids.
:So {{u|Donko XI}}'s is clearly an improvement of the short description, and I'll restore it. ] (]) 13:58, 21 January 2022 (UTC)
::I can't conceive of anyone for whom "Algebraic structure" is a meaningful description who does not already know what a group is. By contrast "American baseball player" and "U.S. state" are terms widely known to the general public. I would suggest "Set with an associative, invertible operation" (45 characters). This short description would at least give a reader with a little math background a concise reminder of what a group is. We give similar hints in the short description for ], ] and many other articles about algebraic structures. I would also call attention to the template ], which appends the short description, if it exists, to a link: "Used in lists to provide an annotated link using the short description from the linked page for annotation. Useful for disambiguation and providing an idea of what the link is about, without having to hover on the link." It's another reason to eschew absolute minimalism in short descriptions.--] (]) 02:54, 24 January 2022 (UTC)
:::You could get even closer to the 40-character soft limit by dropping the article and comma: "Set with associative invertible operation". —] (]) 07:26, 24 January 2022 (UTC)


:This is true, but it is not an evidence. See your talk page. ] (]) 13:26, 26 May 2024 (UTC)
== Character table ==


== Error in examples: division over reals has quasi-group structure despite no closure. ==
A major omission is any reference to ]s. These tables used extensively in chemistry: see, for example, "Chemical Applications of Group Theory", F.A. Cotton, 3rd. edn., 1990. ] (]) 08:47, 15 March 2022 (UTC)


In the final section of the article (Generalizations) there is a table on operations over different sets. Division under the reals is listed as closed but the group structure is given as "quasi-group" despite the table above clearly stating that closure is necessary for a quasi-group structure. Perhaps it could be made more clear what is meant by the table.
== Indentation ==


Edit: After looking over the table a bit more there are a few confusing things about it. It is not explained why something is "N/A". I found myself double checking many things as I am not a group theorist.
Why are all the main section titles double indented ==title==? They should be single indented as the menu only shows 3 levels of indentation. Currently ====items==== are present in the article, but are not shown on the menu. This will require '''all''' indents to be changed in the text. ] (]) 10:48, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
:See ]. ] (]) 11:46, 26 March 2022 (UTC)÷ ] (]) 21:11, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
:The sections of level 4 do not appear in the table of content because of the limit parameter in the template <nowiki>{{TOClimit|limit=3}}</nowiki> that appears at the end of the lead. This is a choice for having a table of content that is not too large. This choice may be discussed, but the table of content is already very large. ] (]) 12:03, 26 March 2022 (UTC)

== Restructuring article? ==

The edits to this ] on ] have been reverted. That was due partially to the misuse of indentation, see ]; but also changes to content must be supported by ], with inline citations. Wish-lists/prayers like <nowiki>{{Cotton&Wilkinson}}</nowiki> are of no use; instead the text book "Advanced Inorganic Chemistry. A Comprehensive Text by Cotton F.A., Wilkinson G. (3rd edition)" can be found and read. If this is to be comprehensible as an article on mathematics, there should be some attempt to reconcile the terminology of physical chemistry with the standard language of theoretical physics and mathematics. In the case of the section "Symmetry"—a brief overview of a general topic—there has so far been no consensus to create separate brand new sections. Here they were sometimes done by copy-pasting content from the section on "Symmetry"; deleting the content, cited to ], ] et al, or to ], was unhelpful; similarly for the citation to Graham Ellis.

As far as groups are concerned, ] and ] are often first encountered in undergraduate courses on finite groups and angular momentum in quantum mechanics (see e.g. the treatment by ]). Separate new sections at the moment seem to be ], with no ]. It unbalances the article. The new image without citations is unhelpful.

The edits today to the article are a combination of vandalism, incompetence and ]: why delete references to physicists or ]; why delete images from the section on "Symmetry"; why favour chemistry above physics? Here are diffs of recent problematic edits, including today's. ] (]) 14:12, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
:I think this is overly harsh. You were right to revert the changes, but that's because we should be conservative with FAs. But there were not CIR-level problems with the changes proposed. If this was not FA quality, I'd say this is what we should expect from the BRD cycle. Additionally, I think there is a problem with the article that I rasied during the FA process that it does not make enough of the applications outside mathematics. While the concept might fundamentally be a mathematical one, its most exciting applications lie in chemistry and physics and the article should not assume that the interest of the reader primarily comes from mathematics. &mdash; ] <small>]</small> 14:19, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
:::It was in an unacceptable state, given the last diff. In physics, the group-theoretic approach to quantum mechanics and ] can be traced back to Weyl, Heisenberg, Schrödinger, Wigner, von Neumann, M.H. Stone, Dirac, Bargmann and Harish-Chandra (cf Wiener's 1933 Cambridge book or Mackey's Chicago and Oxford lecture notes). Specific examples of character tables are undue here, compared to the character formulas of Frobenius, Schur and Weyl (which have been widely applied in theoretical physics and mathematics). Charles Stewart is completely correct that the section can be improved, but that should be done in an incremental way. ] is encyclopedic and explained clearly on the tables in mathematics, physics and chemistry (230 cases); mathematically, ] covers the 32 ]s. It describes the ] from a mathematical standpoint; and is explained in standard text books on chemistry & group theory (e.g. "Chemical Applications of Group Theory", ]). ] (]) 16:43, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
::The reversion is very disappointing. The uses of group theory in chemistry are extensive and were properly documented with references to relevant books. Symmetry in molecules is an essential part of the undergraduate curriculum in chemistry. For example ] cannot be taught without reference to symmetry operations. The designations of many point groups are illustrated at ], which is why the original diagrams were removed. The example of vibrations in methane illustrated the importance of group theory in relation to spectroscopy. For these reasons, I split the original section, without changing anything in the general part, and amplifying the chemical applications, albeit very briefly. The reversion should be undone so that the new material can be properly discussed, if needed. ] (]) 15:13, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
::I agree with all of Charles Stewart's comments. Since article is FA, before making such edits it is good to discuss on talk page first. ] (]) 15:25, 26 March 2022 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 12:12, 25 October 2024

Featured articleGroup (mathematics) is a featured article; it (or a previous version of it) has been identified as one of the best articles produced by the Misplaced Pages community. Even so, if you can update or improve it, please do so.
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Closure

Although it is important to mention closure, there are a few things that disturb me about the way the definition of group is currently written. What is an operation, before the closure axiom is imposed? A function from G × G to some unspecified set? Not only is this a little vague, but it also contradicts the binary operation page it links to. Also, technically speaking, the sentence defining group is wrong, because it ends before any of the axioms are imposed.

I would propose the following, which is slightly longer, but more explicit about the role of closure, which really should be separate from the group axioms. This also breaks the definition into more manageable chunks: first understand what a binary operation is, and then understand the definition of group. Also, this would bring this page more in line with other Misplaced Pages pages, such as ring. Finally, there are many modern textbooks at all levels that present the definition along these lines (e.g., Artin, Lang, ...); I would add such references.


A binary operation ⋅ on a set G is a rule for combining any pair ab of elements of G to form another element of G, denoted ab. (The property "for all a, b in G, the value ab belongs to the same set G" is called closure; it must be checked if it is not known initially.)

A group is a set G equipped with a binary operation ⋅ satisfying the following three additional requirements, known as the group axioms:

Associativity
For all a, b, c in G, one has (ab) ⋅ c = a ⋅ (bc).
Identity element
There exists an element e in G such that, for every a in G, the equations ea = a and ae = a hold. Such an element is unique (see below), and thus one speaks of the identity element.
Inverse element
For each a in G, there exists an element b in G such that ab = e and ba = e, where e is the identity element. For each a, the b is unique (see below) and it is commonly denoted a.


 b: Formally, a binary operation on G is a function G × GG.


I would welcome advice about which defined terms should be bold and which should be italicized; I'm not sure what the convention is.

Ebony Jackson (talk) 02:49, 16 December 2020 (UTC)

I essentially agree, and I have edited the article accordingly. By the way, I have copy-edited the whole section for clarification and for using a simpler wording that is also more common in mathematics.
About "closure": the term is normally used for the restriction of a binary operation to a subset. Using it as it was done is thus an error. I guess that editors were confused by the usual definition of a subgroup as a nonempty subset on which the group operation and the inverse operation are closed. Using this definition, it is a theorem that a subgroup is a group, and that the groups axioms are thus satisfied. D.Lazard (talk) 10:44, 16 December 2020 (UTC)
The above wording of the last two axioms combines an axiom (one sentence) with consequent properties (e.g. uniqueness of the identity element) that is not part of the axiom. It would be good if this separation was made clearer to the reader, since the current presentation does not adequately distinguish for the reader who is not already familiar with the exact axioms. The parts that do not form part of the axiom could be moved to under the listed axioms, for example, or preceded by "This implies that ...". —Quondum 11:33, 4 May 2021 (UTC)
I'm very tempted to add Closure as one of the four group axioms, as it's already one of the "abelian group axioms". Technically the only difference is the commutativity of the operation, so it doesn't make sense to list closure as an axiom of one but not another. IBugOne (talk) 14:20, 29 December 2021 (UTC)
Please don't: "closure" is a property of subsets, and there is no subset here. The fact that the result of the operation belongs to the group is a part of the definition of an operation. By the way, I have removed the use of "closure" in abelian group#Definition. D.Lazard (talk) 15:00, 29 December 2021 (UTC)
Thank you, IBugOne, for pointing out the discrepancy. I agree with D.Lazard that the best solution to the issue you raise is that closure should not be listed an axiom either for group or for abelian group. Ebony Jackson (talk) 23:01, 29 December 2021 (UTC)
Including both left and right identity and inverse is very common mistake. The existence of the left identity and inverse can be proven using the right identity and inverse and vice versa. So it is sufficient to present only one of each in the list of the axioms. Here there are some proves, for example: https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/65239/right-identity-and-right-inverse-in-a-semigroup-imply-it-is-a-group Andrewsk (talk) 00:06, 20 January 2023 (UTC)
You are right that some of the axioms could be deduced from the others, but this is not a "mistake". The standard textbooks intentionally require the identity be a two-sided identity and so on, presumably because it is more natural not to favor one side. Therefore we should leave it as is. Ebony Jackson (talk) 00:03, 23 January 2023 (UTC)

In a similar vein, I modified the leading sentence to mention that the binary operation is closed (defined on the set). Seeing as the original sentence didn't call it a "binary operation" and instead called it an "operation that combines any two elements to form a third element", I would argue that in order to make this expansion clear and precise, it's required to mention that the domains/codomain are all in the set. So therefore I modified it to "an operation that combines any two elements of the set to produce a third element of the set". Quohx (talk) 06:58, 14 March 2022 (UTC)

Character table

A major omission is any reference to character tables. These tables used extensively in chemistry: see, for example, "Chemical Applications of Group Theory", F.A. Cotton, 3rd. edn., 1990. Petergans (talk) 08:47, 15 March 2022 (UTC)

Indentation

Why are all the main section titles double indented ==title==? They should be single indented as the menu only shows 3 levels of indentation. Currently ====items==== are present in the article, but are not shown on the menu. This will require all indents to be changed in the text. Petergans (talk) 10:48, 26 March 2022 (UTC)

See Help:Section#Creation and numbering of sections. D.Lazard (talk) 11:46, 26 March 2022 (UTC)÷
The sections of level 4 do not appear in the table of content because of the limit parameter in the template {{TOClimit|limit=3}} that appears at the end of the lead. This is a choice for having a table of content that is not too large. This choice may be discussed, but the table of content is already very large. D.Lazard (talk) 12:03, 26 March 2022 (UTC)

Restructuring article?

The edits to this featured article on mathematics have been reverted. That was due partially to the misuse of indentation, see WP:CIR; but also changes to content must be supported by reliable sources, with inline citations. Wish-lists/prayers like {{Cotton&Wilkinson}} are of no use; instead the text book "Advanced Inorganic Chemistry. A Comprehensive Text by Cotton F.A., Wilkinson G. (3rd edition)" can be found and read. If this is to be comprehensible as an article on mathematics, there should be some attempt to reconcile the terminology of physical chemistry with the standard language of theoretical physics and mathematics. In the case of the section "Symmetry"—a brief overview of a general topic—there has so far been no consensus to create separate brand new sections. Here they were sometimes done by copy-pasting content from the section on "Symmetry"; deleting the content, cited to Conway, Thurston et al, or to Weyl, was unhelpful; similarly for the citation to Graham Ellis.

As far as groups are concerned, representation theory and character theory are often first encountered in undergraduate courses on finite groups and angular momentum in quantum mechanics (see e.g. the treatment by Jean-Pierre Serre). Separate new sections at the moment seem to be WP:UNDUE, with no WP:consensus. It unbalances the article. The new image without citations is unhelpful.

The edits today to the article are a combination of vandalism, incompetence and POV pushing: why delete references to physicists or Hermann Weyl; why delete images from the section on "Symmetry"; why favour chemistry above physics? Here are diffs of recent problematic edits, including today's. Mathsci (talk) 14:12, 26 March 2022 (UTC)

I think this is overly harsh. You were right to revert the changes, but that's because we should be conservative with FAs. But there were not CIR-level problems with the changes proposed. If this was not FA quality, I'd say this is what we should expect from the BRD cycle. Additionally, I think there is a problem with the article that I rasied during the FA process that it does not make enough of the applications outside mathematics. While the concept might fundamentally be a mathematical one, its most exciting applications lie in chemistry and physics and the article should not assume that the interest of the reader primarily comes from mathematics. — Charles Stewart (talk) 14:19, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
It was in an unacceptable state, given the last diff. In physics, the group-theoretic approach to quantum mechanics and representation theory can be traced back to Weyl, Heisenberg, Schrödinger, Wigner, von Neumann, M.H. Stone, Dirac, Bargmann and Harish-Chandra (cf Wiener's 1933 Cambridge book or Mackey's Chicago and Oxford lecture notes). Specific examples of character tables are undue here, compared to the character formulas of Frobenius, Schur and Weyl (which have been widely applied in theoretical physics and mathematics). Charles Stewart is completely correct that the section can be improved, but that should be done in an incremental way. Space group is encyclopedic and explained clearly on the tables in mathematics, physics and chemistry (230 cases); mathematically, Point groups in three dimensions#Finite isometry groups covers the 32 crystallographic point groups. It describes the crystallographic restriction theorem from a mathematical standpoint; and is explained in standard text books on chemistry & group theory (e.g. "Chemical Applications of Group Theory", F. Albert Cotton). Mathsci (talk) 16:43, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
  • I'll note that, independently of Petergans's motives for changing the history section, we have failed to have any women in that section in the the maths FA where there would be least tokenism in avoiding that failing. Noether's contributions are as worthy of mention as anyone in the last three sentences of the penultimate paragraph, which currently reads: "As of the 20th century, groups gained wide recognition by the pioneering work of Ferdinand Georg Frobenius and William Burnside, who worked on representation theory of finite groups, Richard Brauer's modular representation theory and Issai Schur's papers. The theory of Lie groups, and more generally locally compact groups was studied by Hermann Weyl, Élie Cartan and many others. Its algebraic counterpart, the theory of algebraic groups, was first shaped by Claude Chevalley (from the late 1930s) and later by the work of Armand Borel and Jacques Tits.". — Charles Stewart (talk) 18:47, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
  • Ah, invariant theory. The finite generation of invariants of finite groups goes back to Felix Klein ("Lectures on the Icosahedron"), David Hilbert and Emmy Noether (1916). Her short, elementary and constructive proof is presented in Weyl's "The Classical Groups, Their Invariants and Representations" (Pages 275–276, 2nd edition). I don't believe it can be found on wikipedia. OTOH R.e.b. gave Hilbert's non-constructive proof using the averaging or Reynolds operator. Mathsci (talk) 20:42, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
The reversion is very disappointing. The uses of group theory in chemistry are extensive and were properly documented with references to relevant books. Symmetry in molecules is an essential part of the undergraduate curriculum in chemistry. For example chirality cannot be taught without reference to symmetry operations. The designations of many point groups are illustrated at Molecular symmetry#Common point groups, which is why the original diagrams were removed. The example of vibrations in methane illustrated the importance of group theory in relation to spectroscopy. For these reasons, I split the original section, without changing anything in the general part, and amplifying the chemical applications, albeit very briefly. The reversion should be undone so that the new material can be properly discussed, if needed. Petergans (talk) 15:13, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
  • While it's natural to be disappointed when changes you've put substantial work into are rejected, my impression is that you lack experience of FA-quality editing. That's OK - little of post-high-school science is FA quality on WP - and I think the impulse behind your changes are OK, but you need to accept that getting agreement to changes to the article will be harder than you are used to. If you still think that you want to invest the time in achieving structural changes to the article, I recommend you put in some time and familiarise yourself with the changes that were made to the article over the last year, which has seen quite a big change in the degree of conformance with the style guide due to the push to get the article to FA level. — Charles Stewart (talk) 18:23, 26 March 2022 (UTC)
I agree with all of Charles Stewart's comments. Since article is FA, before making such edits it is good to discuss on talk page first. Gumshoe2 (talk) 15:25, 26 March 2022 (UTC)

OK, so be it. This means that, for people like me, the article is sub-standard and should never have been promoted to FA. I've checked with a number of chemistry texts (University level) and they all have something about symmetry; most include or discuss applications that depend on the use of point group character tables. The applications don't belong in the same place as the theory (as is the case at present). For me, that means that this discussion is now closed. Petergans (talk) 20:11, 26 March 2022 (UTC)

Groups as categories

I feel that the "category" point of view is missing : a group G {\displaystyle G} can be seen as a category A G {\displaystyle A_{G}} with 1 objeect (call it a {\displaystyle a} ) where elements g G {\displaystyle g\in G} corresponds to isomorphisms f g : a a {\displaystyle f_{g}:a\to a} , and so that composition goes well. The reason why I didn't do the changes myself is that I don't know where to put it, or if it could only be a redirection to the (quite scarce) examples from Category, in which case I would try and extend these. GLenPLonk (talk) 14:47, 1 November 2022 (UTC)

Good idea! I tried to implement your suggestion, by adding it to the discussion of groupoids in the Generalizations section. Ebony Jackson (talk) 18:42, 1 November 2022 (UTC)

Identity and also inverse elements must be part of set

Note to 100.36.106.199 who removed (2 days ago) my words "the set contains an identity element" and returned to the previous wording "an identity element exists": The point is that it is not sufficient for an identity element to exist; it must be part of the set or else the set does not constitute a group.

Consider the first example: the integers under addition. If we consider the set without the identity element zero: ..., -3, -2, -1, +1, +2, +3, +4, ... then we have a set which is NOT a group. Zero still exists but it has to be included in the group.

As for requiring parallelism in wording for identity element and inverse elements, I actually agree that the wording should be parallel. So I will now make it parallel by adding that the inverse elements also must be part of the group (although you said you hoped not). Again for the integers under addition: the set 0, +1, +2, +3, +4, ... is NOT a group without the negative integers. The fact that they exist is not sufficient. Dirac66 (talk) 02:01, 10 July 2023 (UTC)

Your example is incoherent: the object you have presented is not a set with an operation on it (because what is -1 + 1?). Assuming you had not made this error, you would be wrong that an identity exists: the operation is defined (only) on the set, things outside the set cannot be combined using the operation with things in the set and so in particular they cannot be an identity or an inverse. --100.36.106.199 (talk) 13:49, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
I mean, it is true that students first learning abstract algebra suffer from the confusion that you are expressing here. But I think it is instructive that the first time you made the change, you did not even notice that the same argument applies to inverses as to the identity. That's because the meaning is not actually ambiguous or otherwise problematic. --100.36.106.199 (talk) 13:52, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
Having said all that: the revised wording seems fine. --100.36.106.199 (talk) 13:54, 10 July 2023 (UTC)

Undefined terms and notational elements

The statements about injective homomorphisms use several notational elements that have not been introduced previously and that will not be intuitive to a general reader: {\displaystyle {\stackrel {\sim }{\to }}} , {\displaystyle \hookrightarrow } , and ker ϕ {\displaystyle \ker \phi } .

The latter also appears in the Presentations section, along with reference to the free group

What is the fundamental group of a plane minus a point?

"The fundamental group of a plane minus a point (bold) consists of loops around the missing point. This group is isomorphic to the integers." I know very little about groups that I didn't learn from this page... but... the integers are a set, not a group, right? So "isomorphic to the integers" is a vague way of saying "isomorphic to some group that has the integers as the underyling set"? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2404:4408:6A6E:7000:E48B:A59:8E82:2FCF (talk) 08:21, 3 October 2023 (UTC)

In this case, the relevant group is the integers under the addition operation. –jacobolus (t) 17:24, 3 October 2023 (UTC)
The given quote could be considered incorrect: the loop space consists of loops and the fundamental group crucially consists of equivalence classes of loops. The main text avoids this by saying that "elements of the fundamental group are represented by loops" which is perfectly correct but maybe overly evasive or obscure for most readers. Also, the loops don't have to go around the missing point - they just have to avoid it.
There's also the problem that the blue and orange curves in the image don't show two elements of the fundamental group: they show two different (free homotopy classes of) maps from the circle into the space. A loop representing the fundamental group has (although usually only implicitly) a fixed base point, and these two loops obviously have no common base point. So the picture is not quite illustrative of the fundamental group, even though any reader already familiar with the concepts can easily see what it's trying to communicate.
Being fully precise would obviously not be desirable in the context of the page, but perhaps a talented writer could find a way to rephrase the paragraph and image/image caption in a way that remains concise and readable but is also fully accurate. (I'm not talented enough.) Maybe it would help to move the paragraph to its own subsection "algebraic topology" or "fundamental group". Gumshoe2 (talk) 19:31, 3 October 2023 (UTC)
Looking at this picture, I agree it's weird. We probably instead want something like the pictures in Winding number § Intuitive description. –jacobolus (t) 19:37, 3 October 2023 (UTC)
@Gumshoe2 I tried rewriting the explanation here. Is that any clearer? –jacobolus (t) 22:13, 3 October 2023 (UTC)

One can show that

@D.Lazard: I removed the bold text from "...assuming associativity and the existence of a left identity and a left inverse for each element , one can show that every left inverse is also a right inverse of the same element as follows.", which you reverted with the comment "It must be clear that a proof is behind the assetrion". I do not understand the need for including "one can show that". Of course it has been shown. That is the reason we know it is true. Is there a way it could be true without having been shown to be true? Nuretok (talk) 13:20, 26 May 2024 (UTC)

This is true, but it is not an evidence. See your talk page. D.Lazard (talk) 13:26, 26 May 2024 (UTC)

Error in examples: division over reals has quasi-group structure despite no closure.

In the final section of the article (Generalizations) there is a table on operations over different sets. Division under the reals is listed as closed but the group structure is given as "quasi-group" despite the table above clearly stating that closure is necessary for a quasi-group structure. Perhaps it could be made more clear what is meant by the table.

Edit: After looking over the table a bit more there are a few confusing things about it. It is not explained why something is "N/A". I found myself double checking many things as I am not a group theorist. Nathalene (talk) 21:11, 24 October 2024 (UTC)

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