CLOSED LOOP INTERVAL ONTOLOGY
       The Digital Integration of Conceptual Form
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The Many Forms of Many/One
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Boundary
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Definition / description

Any of the edges in this form, each of which functions as a limit

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Mon, Mar 15, 2021

Reference

Any of the edges in this form, each of which functions as a limit

In topology and mathematics in general, the boundary of a subset S of a topological space X is the set of points which can be approached both from S and from the outside of S. More precisely, it is the set of points in the closure of S not belonging to the interior of S.

An element of the boundary of S is called a boundary point of S. The term boundary operation refers to finding or taking the boundary of a set. Notations used for boundary of a set S include bd(S), fr(S), and {\displaystyle \partial S}\partial S. Some authors (for example Willard, in General Topology) use the term frontier instead of boundary in an attempt to avoid confusion with a different definition used in algebraic topology and the theory of manifolds. Despite widespread acceptance of the meaning of the terms boundary and frontier, they have sometimes been used to refer to other sets. For example, Metric Spaces by E. T. Copson uses the term boundary to refer to Hausdorff's border, which is defined as the intersection of a set with its boundary.[1] Hausdorff also introduced the term residue, which is defined as the intersection of a set with the closure of the border of its complement.[2]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boundary_(topology)