syndeticity

Etymology
From. Equivalent to.

Noun

 * 1) The state or quality of being syndetic, particularly
 * 2)  The use of syndeton, the state or quality of using a conjunction or equivalent conjunctive structure.
 * 3)  The use of crossreferences or the ability to be crossreferenced.
 * 4) * 1994, Mary Esther Brown, Children's Naming of Subject Categories..., Drexel University, p. 79:
 * Values within affordances were ranked and assigned metric values. Standardized canonical discriminant function coefficients of .835, .515, and .298 for complexity, concreteness, and syndeticity.
 * 1)  The condition of having bounded gaps between members.
 * 2) * 1988, Robert Ellis & al., ed., Topological Dynamics and Applications... American Mathematical Society, p. 211:
 * For topological recurrence we need a different notion of largeness for subsets of S, namely that of syndeticity. A subset of E of N is said to be syndetic if it has bounded gaps. Equivalently, E C N is syndetic if N is the union of finitely many shifts.