Inclusion
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search For inclusion and exclusion of Wikipedia templates, see .Inclusion may refer to:
In metallurgy:
- Inclusion (casting), a type of metal casting defect
- Inclusions in Aluminium Alloys, solid particles in liquid aluminium alloy
In social inclusion of persons:
- Inclusion (disability rights) Inclusion is a term used by people with disabilities and other disability rights advocates for the idea that all people should freely, openly and without pity accommodate any person with a disability without restrictions or limitations of any kind. In the United Kingdom, it is symbolized most readily in British Broadcasting Corporation radio, accommodating any person with a disability
- Inclusion (value and practice), a practice of ensuring that people in organizations feel they belong
- Inclusion (education) Inclusion in the context of education is the practice, in which students with special educational needs spend most or all of their time with non-disabled students. Implementation of this practice varies; schools can use it for selected students with mild to severe special needs, students with special educational needs spend most or all of their time with non-disabled students
In other uses:
- Inclusion (mineral) Inclusions are usually other minerals or rocks, but may also be water, gas or petroleum. Liquid or vapor inclusions are known as fluid inclusions. In the case of amber it is possible to find insects and plants as inclusions, any material that is trapped inside a mineral during its formation
- Inclusion bodies Inclusion bodies are nuclear or cytoplasmic aggregates of stainable substances, usually proteins. They typically represent sites of viral multiplication in a bacterium or a eukaryotic cell and usually consist of viral capsid proteins. Inclusion bodies can also be hallmarks of genetic diseases, as in the case of Neuronal Inclusion bodies in, aggregates of stainable substances in biological cells
- Inclusion (taxonomy), combining of biological species
- Inclusion of a copy of named information within other information:
- Inclusion by reference, legal documentation process, see incorporation by reference
- Include file, programming mechanism, see header file A header file commonly contains forward declarations of classes, subroutines, variables, and other identifiers. Programmers who wish to declare standardized identifiers in more than one source file can place such identifiers in a single header file, which other code can then include whenever the header contents are required
- In mathematics:
- Inclusion (set theory) In mathematics, especially in set theory, a set A is a subset of a set B if A is "contained" inside B. A and B may coincide. The relationship of one set being a subset of another is called inclusion or sometimes containment, or subset
- Inclusion map, or inclusion function, or canonical injection
See also
- Inclusions in Aluminium Alloys
- Exclusion (disambiguation)
- Inclusive (disambiguation)
- Exclusive (disambiguation)
- Transclusion For example, an article about a country might include a chart or a paragraph describing that country's agricultural exports from a different article about agriculture. Rather than copying the included data and storing it in two places, a transclusion embodies modular design, by allowing it to be stored only once and viewed in different contexts
- Inclusion–exclusion principle
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