Math 441 Hints

Hints for students taking Math 441, "Introduction to Modern Algebra," using the text Numbers and Symmetry, by Johnston and Richman

See Fred Richman's web site at http://www.math.fau.edu/Richman/

See Errata for textbook.

Chapter 13

Chapter 1

Chapter 3

Chapter 6

Permutation Tool

Here is a tool for doing some simple calculations with permutations. Write any permutation as a product of cycles, and this tool will reduce it to a "canonical" form, as a product of disjoint cycles. Remember to separate elements with commas or spaces. If you write (123), it will be interpreted as the permutation that sends the element 123 to itself.

A canonical form means a form that is unique for each permutation. There are many ways to write any particular permutation: these all represent the same permutation:

Having multiple ways of writing the same thing is sometimes convenient, but sometimes very inconvenient. For instance, it is hard to recognize whether two permutations are actually the same. We can use the following rules to define a canonical form for each permutation:
  1. Use cycle form
  2. Write as a product of disjoint cycles
  3. Omit "cycles" of length 1, except that the identity permutation is written as (1)
  4. Rotate each cycle to put its smallest element at the left
  5. Order the cycles from left to right by smallest element

There is still one kind of ambiguity: there is no way to tell whether a permutation such as (1 2 3) is an element of S5 or, for instance, S17. This is not usually a problem, since the context usually resolves the question.

Chapter 8

Chapter 9


Errata for Textbook

(This list is from Fred Richman's web site. At least some of these errors were corrected by the time my copy of the text was printed.)


© Michael Kantor 2003-05 Last modified