Almost all
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In mathematics, the phrase almost all has a number of specialised uses.
"Almost all" is sometimes used synonymously with "all but finitely many" or "all but a countable set"; see almost. An example of this usage is the Frivolous Theorem of Arithmetic, which states that almost all natural numbers are very, very, very large., [Frivolous Theorem of Arithmetic] at MathWorld.
When speaking about the reals, sometimes it means "all reals but a set of Lebesgue measure zero". In this sense we can say "almost all reals are irrational".
In number theory, if P(n) is a property of positive integers, and if p(N) denotes the number of positive integers n less than N for which P(n) holds, and if
- p(N)/N → 1 as N → ∞
- [(\forall^\infty n) P(n)].
Occasionally, "almost all" is used in the sense of "almost everywhere" in measure theory, or in the closely related sense of "almost surely" in probability theory.
See also
References
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