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Definition of Reachable
1. Adjective. Easily approached. "A site approachable from a branch of the Niger"
Definition of Reachable
1. a. Being within reach.
Definition of Reachable
1. Adjective. Within easy reach; accessible ¹
2. Adjective. (mathematics) (''of a node'') That may be reached from another node in a graph by passing along one or more lines ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Reachable
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Reachable
Literary usage of Reachable
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Ruling Case Law as Developed and Established by the Decisions and by William Mark McKinney, Burdett Alberto Rich (1917)
"which are not generally or readily reachable by ordinary legal process but require
for their subjection to a creditor's claim the process of garnishment or ..."
2. Rose's Notes on the United States Supreme Court Reports (2 Dallas to 241 by Walter Malins Rose, Charles Lawrence Thompson, United States Supreme Court (1919)
"7, giving; courts equity jurisdiction over suits by creditors to reach property
of debtor not reachable at law by attachment or execution. ..."
3. Constrained Mechanics and Lie Theory by Robert Hermann (1992)
"Vector field systems, their orbit curves and reachable sets and the Caratheodory-Chow
theorem. Lie and Vessiot often described differential systems by means ..."
4. Adaptive Statistical Procedures and Related Topics: Proceedings of a by Herbert Robbins, John Van Ryzin (1986)
"Property WR (weak reversibility): For any real number E and any two states i and
j, i is reachable at height E from j if and only if j is reachable at ..."
5. Product Lines for Digital Information Products by Victor Pankratius (2007)
"Furthermore, • the vertices represent the reachable markings, • the distinguished
initial vertex represents the initial marking MQ, • the labeled edges are ..."
6. Geometric Computing Science: First Steps by Robert Hermann (1991)
"In my work [7, 12], in order to study this reachable set, I have focussed ...
They provide an a-priori limitation on the size of the reachable set, ..."