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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1959%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1959 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Boldklubben 1909 won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1959 in Danish football
Top level Danish football league seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1960%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1960 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Aarhus Gymnastikforening won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1
Top level Danish football league seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1961%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1961 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Esbjerg fB won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1
Top level Danish football league seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1962%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1962 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Esbjerg fB won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1
Top level Danish football league seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1963%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1963 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Esbjerg fB won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1
Top level Danish football league seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1965%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1965 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Esbjerg fB won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1966%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1966 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Hvidovre IF won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1
Top level Danish football league seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1968%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1968 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Kjøbenhavns Boldklub won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1
Top level Danish football league seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1969%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1969 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Boldklubben 1903 won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1
Top level Danish football league seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1970%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1970 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Boldklubben 1903 won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1
Top level Danish football league seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1971%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1971 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Vejle Boldklub won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1
Top level Danish football league seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1972%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1972 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Vejle Boldklub won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1
Top level Danish football league seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1973%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1973 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Hvidovre IF won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1
Top level Danish football league seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1974%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1974 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Kjøbenhavns Boldklub won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1
Top level Danish football league seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1975%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1975 season.
Overview
It was contested by 16 teams, and Køge BK won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1
Top level Danish football league seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1976%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1976 season.
Overview
It was contested by 16 teams, and Boldklubben 1903 won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1
Top level Danish football league seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1977%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1977 season.
Overview
It was contested by 16 teams, and Odense Boldklub won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1
Top level Danish football league seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1978%20Danish%201st%20Division | Statistics of Danish 1st Division in the 1978 season.
Overview
It was contested by 16 teams, and Vejle Boldklub won the championship.
League standings
Results
References
Denmark - List of final tables (RSSSF)
Danish 1st Division seasons
Dan
Dan
1
Top level Danish football league seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woo%20circles | In geometry, the Woo circles, introduced by Peter Y. Woo, are a set of infinitely many Archimedean circles.
Construction
Form an arbelos with the two inner semicircles tangent at point C. Let m denote any nonnegative real number. Draw two circles, with radii m times the radii of the smaller two arbelos semicircles, centered on the arbelos ground line, also tangent to each other at point C and with radius m times the radius of the corresponding small arbelos arc. Any circle centered on the Schoch line and externally tangent to the circles is a Woo circle.
See also
Schoch circles
References
Arbelos
Circles |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201982%29 | João Pedro dos Santos Gonçalves (born 15 April 1982 in Beja), known as China, is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays as a left back.
Club statistics
References
External links
1982 births
Living people
People from Beja, Portugal
Portuguese men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
Primeira Liga players
Liga Portugal 2 players
Segunda Divisão players
C.D. Beja players
S.C. Pombal players
C.D. Fátima players
F.C. Maia players
Associação Naval 1º de Maio players
C.F. Os Belenenses players
U.D. Vilafranquense players
Ukrainian Premier League players
FC Metalurh Donetsk players
Cypriot First Division players
Ermis Aradippou FC players
Nea Salamis Famagusta FC players
Portuguese expatriate men's footballers
Expatriate men's footballers in Ukraine
Expatriate men's footballers in Cyprus
Portuguese expatriate sportspeople in Ukraine
Portuguese expatriate sportspeople in Cyprus
Sportspeople from Beja District |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Formalized%20Music | Formalized Music: Thought and Mathematics in Composition is a book by Greek composer, architect, and engineer Iannis Xenakis in which he explains his motivation, philosophy, and technique for composing music with stochastic mathematical functions. It was published in Paris in 1963 as Musiques formelles: nouveaux principes formels de composition musicale as a special double issue of La Revue musicale and republished in an expanded edition in 1981 in Paris by Stock Musique. It was later translated into English with three added chapters and published in 1971 by Indiana University Press, republished in 1992 by Pendragon Press with a second edition published in 2001, also by Pendragon. The book contains the complete FORTRAN program code for one of Xenakis's early computer music composition programs GENDY. It has been described as a groundbreaking work.
Editions
Xenakis, Iannis. 1963. Musiques formelles: nouveaux principes formels de composition musicale. Special issue of La Revue musicale, nos. 253–254. Paris: Editions Richard-Masse.
Xenakis, Iannis. 1971. Formalized Music: Thought and Mathematics in Composition, translated by Christopher Butchers (chapters 1–6), G. W. Hopkins (chapter 7), and Mr. and Mrs. John Challifour (chapter 8). Bloomington and London: Indiana University Press.
Xenakis, Iannis. 1981. Musiques formelles: nouveaux principes formels de composition musicale, expanded edition, Paris: Stock Musique. .
Xenakis, Iannis. 1992. Formalized Music: Thought and Mathematics in Composition, second, revised English edition, with additional material translated by Sharon Kanach. Harmonologia Series No. 6. Stuyvesant, NY: Pendragon Press. . Reprinted Hillsdale, NY: Pendragon Press, 2001.
References
1963 non-fiction books
1971 non-fiction books
1992 non-fiction books
2001 non-fiction books
Music books
Mathematics of music |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1955%E2%80%9356%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1955/1956 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and St Patrick's Athletic won the championship.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
Ireland
League of Ireland seasons
1955–56 in Republic of Ireland association football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1956%E2%80%9357%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1956/1957 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Shamrock Rovers won the championship and qualified to play in the European Cup for next season.
Final classification
Cork Hibernians were elected to the league for next season.
Results
Top scorers
Ireland
League of Ireland seasons
1956–57 in Republic of Ireland association football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1957%E2%80%9358%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1957/1958 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Drumcondra F.C. won the championship and qualified to play in the European Cup for next season.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
Ireland
1957–58 in Republic of Ireland association football
League of Ireland seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1958%E2%80%9359%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1958/1959 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Shamrock Rovers won the championship and qualified to play in the European Cup for next season.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
Ireland
League of Ireland seasons
1958–59 in Republic of Ireland association football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1959%E2%80%9360%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1959/1960 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Limerick won the championship and qualified to play in the European Cup for following season 1960/61.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
Ireland
League of Ireland seasons
1959–60 in Republic of Ireland association football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1960%E2%80%9361%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1960/1961 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Drumcondra won the championship and qualified to play in the 1961–62 European Cup for next season.
St Patrick's Athletic qualified to play in the 1961–62 European Cup Winners' Cup.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
League of Ireland seasons
Ireland
1960–61 in Republic of Ireland association football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1961%E2%80%9362%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1961/1962 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Shelbourne won the championship after beating Cork Celtic 1-0 in a Championship Play-off on 2 May 1962 at Dalymount Park.
Shelbourne qualified to play in the European Cup, Shamrock Rovers qualified to play in the Cup Winners' Cup and Drumcondra qualified to play in the Fairs Cup for next season.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
League of Ireland seasons
Ireland
1961–62 in Republic of Ireland association football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1962%E2%80%9363%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1962/1963 season.
Overview
It was contested by 10 teams, and Dundalk won the championship.
Final classification
Drogheda and Sligo Rovers were elected to the league for next season.
Results
Top scorers
League of Ireland seasons
Ireland
1962–63 in Republic of Ireland association football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1963%E2%80%9364%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1963/1964 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Shamrock Rovers won the championship.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
References
rsssf.com
League of Ireland seasons
Ireland
1963–64 in Republic of Ireland association football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1965%E2%80%9366%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1965/1966 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Waterford won the championship.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
League of Ireland seasons
Ireland
1965–66 in Republic of Ireland association football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1966%E2%80%9367%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1966/1967 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Dundalk won the championship.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
League of Ireland seasons
Ireland
1966–67 in Republic of Ireland association football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1967%E2%80%9368%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1967/1968 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Waterford won the championship.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
League of Ireland seasons
Ireland
1967–68 in Republic of Ireland association football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1968%E2%80%9369%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1968/1969 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Waterford won the championship for the 3rd time.
Final classification
Athlone Town and Finn Harps were elected to the league for next season, 1969/70.
Results
Top scorers
League of Ireland seasons
Ireland
1968–69 in Republic of Ireland association football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1969%E2%80%9370%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1969/1970 season.
Overview
It was contested by 14 teams, and Waterford won the championship.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
League of Ireland seasons
Ireland
1969–70 in Republic of Ireland association football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1970%E2%80%9371%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1970/1971 season.
Overview
The championship was contested by 14 teams. Cork Hibernians won the title after beating Shamrock Rovers 3-1 in a play-off on 25 April 1971 in Dalymount Park with goals from Miah Dennehy (2) and Dave Wigginton for Cork Hibernians. Mick Leech scored for Shamrock Rovers.
Final classification
Results
League Title play-off
Top scorers
Ireland, 1970-71
1970–71 in Republic of Ireland association football
League of Ireland seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1971%E2%80%9372%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1971/1972 season.
Overview
It was contested by 14 teams, and Waterford won the championship.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
Ireland, 1971-72
1971–72 in Republic of Ireland association football
League of Ireland seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1972%E2%80%9373%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1972/1973 season.
Overview
It was contested by 14 teams, and Waterford won the championship.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
Ireland, 1972-73
1972–73 in Republic of Ireland association football
League of Ireland seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1973%E2%80%9374%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1973/1974 season.
Overview
It was contested by 14 teams, and Cork Celtic won the championship.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
Ireland, 1973-74
1973–74 in Republic of Ireland association football
League of Ireland seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1974%E2%80%9375%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1974–75 season.
Overview
It was contested by 14 teams, and Bohemians won the championship.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
Ireland, 1974-75
1974–75 in Republic of Ireland association football
League of Ireland seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1975%E2%80%9376%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1975–76 season.
Overview
It was contested by 14 teams, and Dundalk won the championship.
Final classification
Albert Rovers were elected to the league for next season.
Results
Top scorers
Ireland, 1975-76
1975–76 in Republic of Ireland association football
League of Ireland seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1976%E2%80%9377%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1976/1977 season.
Overview
It was contested by 14 teams, and Sligo Rovers won the championship.
Final classification
Galway Rovers F.C. and Thurles Town F.C. were elected to the league for next season.
Results
Top scorers
Ireland, 1976-77
1976–77 in Republic of Ireland association football
League of Ireland seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1977%E2%80%9378%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1977–78 season.
Overview
It was contested by 16 teams, and Bohemians won the championship.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
League Of Ireland, 1977-78
1977–78 in Republic of Ireland association football
League of Ireland seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1978%E2%80%9379%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1978–79 season.
Overview
It was contested by 16 teams, and Dundalk F.C. won the championship.
Final classification
U.C.D. were elected to the league for next season.
Results
Top scorers
League Of Ireland, 1978-79
1978–79 in Republic of Ireland association football
League of Ireland seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1980%E2%80%9381%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1980–81 season.
Overview
It was contested by 16 teams, and Athlone Town won the championship.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
Ireland, 1980-81
1980–81 in Republic of Ireland association football
League of Ireland seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1981%E2%80%9382%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1981-82 season.
Overview
It was contested by 16 teams, and Dundalk won the championship. This season used a trial point system with 4 for an away win, 3 for a home win, 2 for an away draw, 1 for a home draw.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
Ireland, 1981-82
1981–82 in Republic of Ireland association football
League of Ireland seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1982%E2%80%9383%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1982-83 season.
Overview
It was contested by 14 teams, and Athlone Town won the championship.
Final classification
Results
Top scorers
References
League Table
Ireland, 1982-83
1982–83 in Republic of Ireland association football
League of Ireland seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1983%E2%80%9384%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1983–1984 season.
Overview
It was contested by 14 teams, and Shamrock Rovers won the championship.
Final table
Cork City and Longford Town were elected to the league for next season.
Results
Top scorers
Ireland, 1983-84
1983–84 in Republic of Ireland association football
League of Ireland seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1984%E2%80%9385%20League%20of%20Ireland | Statistics of League of Ireland in the 1984–1985 season.
Overview
It was contested by 16 teams, and Shamrock Rovers won the championship. The prize for the League Champions was £5,000.
Final table
Bottom four clubs relegated to the new First Division for next season.
Bray Wanderers, Cobh Ramblers, Derry City, E.M.F.A., Monaghan United and Newcastle United were elected to the 1985–86 League of Ireland First Division.
Results
Top scorers
References
Ireland, 1984-85
1984–85 in Republic of Ireland association football
League of Ireland seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grem%C3%AB | Gremë is a village in Ferizaj Municipality, Kosovo. According to the Kosovo Agency of Statistics (KAS) estimate from the 2011 census, there were 4,421 people residing in Gaçkë, with Albanians constituting the majority of the population.
References
Villages in Ferizaj |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order%20of%20integration%20%28calculus%29 | In calculus, interchange of the order of integration is a methodology that transforms iterated integrals (or multiple integrals through the use of Fubini's theorem) of functions into other, hopefully simpler, integrals by changing the order in which the integrations are performed. In some cases, the order of integration can be validly interchanged; in others it cannot.
Problem statement
The problem for examination is evaluation of an integral of the form
where D is some two-dimensional area in the xy–plane. For some functions f straightforward integration is feasible, but where that is not true, the integral can sometimes be reduced to simpler form by changing the order of integration. The difficulty with this interchange is determining the change in description of the domain D.
The method also is applicable to other multiple integrals.
Sometimes, even though a full evaluation is difficult, or perhaps requires a numerical integration, a double integral can be reduced to a single integration, as illustrated next. Reduction to a single integration makes a numerical evaluation much easier and more efficient.
Relation to integration by parts
Consider the iterated integral
which we will write using the prefix notation commonly seen in physics:
In this expression, the second integral is calculated first with respect to y and x is held constant—a strip of width dx is integrated first over the y-direction (a strip of width dx in the x direction is integrated with respect to the y variable across the y direction), adding up an infinite amount of rectangles of width dy along the y-axis. This forms a three dimensional slice dx wide along the x-axis, from y=a to y=x along the y-axis, and in the z direction z=h(y). Notice that if the thickness dx is infinitesimal, x varies only infinitesimally on the slice. We can assume that x is constant. This integration is as shown in the left panel of Figure 1, but is inconvenient especially when the function h(y) is not easily integrated. The integral can be reduced to a single integration by reversing the order of integration as shown in the right panel of the figure. To accomplish this interchange of variables, the strip of width dy is first integrated from the line x = y to the limit x = z, and then the result is integrated from y = a to y = z, resulting in:
This result can be seen to be an example of the formula for integration by parts, as stated below:
Substitute:
Which gives the result.
Principal-value integrals
For application to principal-value integrals, see Whittaker and Watson, Gakhov, Lu, or Zwillinger. See also the discussion of the Poincaré-Bertrand transformation in Obolashvili. An example where the order of integration cannot be exchanged is given by Kanwal:
while:
The second form is evaluated using a partial fraction expansion and an evaluation using the Sokhotski–Plemelj formula:
The notation indicates a Cauchy principal value. See Kanwal.
Basic theorems
A discussion of the basis |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geometric%20data%20analysis | Geometric data analysis comprises geometric aspects of image analysis, pattern analysis, and shape analysis, and the approach of multivariate statistics, which treat arbitrary data sets as clouds of points in a space that is n-dimensional. This includes topological data analysis, cluster analysis, inductive data analysis, correspondence analysis, multiple correspondence analysis, principal components analysis and
See also
Algebraic statistics for algebraic-geometry in statistics
Combinatorial data analysis
Computational anatomy for the study of shapes and forms at the morphome scale
Structured data analysis (statistics)
References
Approximation of Geodesic Distances for Geometric Data Analysis
Differential geometry and data analysis
Differential Geometry and Statistics, M.K. Murray, J.W. Rice, Chapman and Hall/CRC,
Ridges in image and data analysis, David Eberly, Springer, 1996,
Fields of geometry
Multivariate statistics
Spatial analysis
Applied geometry |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structured%20data%20analysis%20%28statistics%29 | Structured data analysis is the statistical data analysis of structured data. This can arise either in the form of an a priori structure such as multiple-choice questionnaires or in situations with the need to search for structure that fits the given data, either exactly or approximately. This structure can then be used for making comparisons, predictions, manipulations etc.
Types of structured data analysis
Algebraic data analysis
Bayesian analysis
Cluster analysis
Combinatorial data analysis
Formal concept analysis
Functional data analysis
Geometric data analysis
Regression analysis
Shape analysis
Topological data analysis
Tree structured data analysis
References
Further reading
Leland Wilkinson, (1992) Tree Structured Data Analysis: AID, CHAID and CART
Statistical analysis
Structure |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extended%20negative%20binomial%20distribution | In probability and statistics the extended negative binomial distribution is a discrete probability distribution extending the negative binomial distribution. It is a truncated version of the negative binomial distribution for which estimation methods have been studied.
In the context of actuarial science, the distribution appeared in its general form in a paper by K. Hess, A. Liewald and K.D. Schmidt when they characterized all distributions for which the extended Panjer recursion works. For the case , the distribution was already discussed by Willmot and put into a parametrized family with the logarithmic distribution and the negative binomial distribution by H.U. Gerber.
Probability mass function
For a natural number and real parameters , with and , the probability mass function of the ExtNegBin(, , ) distribution is given by
and
where
is the (generalized) binomial coefficient and denotes the gamma function.
Probability generating function
Using that for is also a probability mass function, it follows that the probability generating function is given by
For the important case , hence , this simplifies to
References
Discrete distributions
Factorial and binomial topics |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur%20Byron%20Coble | Arthur Byron Coble (November 3, 1878 – December 8, 1966) was an American mathematician. He did research on finite geometries and the group theory related to them, Cremona transformations associated with the Galois theory of equations, and the relations between hyperelliptic theta functions, irrational binary invariants, the Weddle surface and the Kummer surface. He was President of the American Mathematical Society from 1933 to 1934.
Biography
Early life
Arthur Coble was born on November 3, 1878, in Williamstown, Pennsylvania. His mother Emma was a schoolteacher. When Coble was born, his father Ruben was the manager of a store. Later, he became president of a bank. Coble's parents belonged to Evangelical Lutheran Church. Coble was brought up strictly as an Evangelical Lutheran; however, he rejected this Church when he reached adulthood.
Coble entered Gettysburg College in 1893, and completed his A.B. in 1897. He spent a year as a public school teacher. He entered Johns Hopkins University in 1898 to pursue his graduate studies. He completed his Ph.D. from the university in 1902. His Ph.D. thesis was The Relation of the Quartic Curve to Conics. His thesis supervisor was English-born mathematician Frank Morley. Later, Coble recalled how Morley made it "a cardinal point to have on hand a sufficient variety of thesis problems to accommodate particular tastes and capacities."
Academic career
In 1902, Coble became an instructor in mathematics at the University of Missouri. One year later, in 1903, he was appointed to Johns Hopkins University as Morley's research assistant. In 1903, he published his doctoral dissertation as The quartic curve as related to conics in the Transactions of the American Mathematical Society and took up the research assistant position in Baltimore, Maryland. In 1902, American businessman Andrew Carnegie founded the Carnegie Institution of Washington. The research of Coble and Morley were one of the first pieces of research the Institution supported. The funding of the Institute was generous enough to allow Coble to use the grant to travel abroad. He traveled to Germany where he studied at Greifswald University and the University of Bonn. He wanted to work with Eduard Study, who was well known to mathematicians at Johns Hopkins University because he had taught there in 1893.
Coble returned to the United States for the start of the 1904-05 session. He was appointed an instructor in mathematics at Johns Hopkins University.
Coble married Abby Walker Adams Whitney in 1905. They had four children.
Coble was promoted to associate professor at Johns Hopkins University in 1909. He left Johns Hopkins after he was offered a full professorship at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) in 1918. He remained at Illinois for the rest of his career. He was a visiting professor at the University of Chicago in 1919 and was at Johns Hopkins University in 1927–28. He became head of the Department of Mathematics at the UIUC in |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1975%E2%80%9376%20Eredivisie | The Dutch Eredivisie in the 1975–76 season was contested by 18 teams. PSV won the championship.
League standings
Results
Season statistics
Top scorers
See also
1975–76 Eerste Divisie
1975–76 KNVB Cup
References
Eredivisie official website - info on all seasons
RSSSF
Eredivisie seasons
Netherlands
1 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bimal%20Kumar%20Roy | Bimal Kumar Roy is a former Director of the Indian Statistical Institute. He is a cryptologist from the Cryptology Research Group of the Applied Statistics Unit of ISI, Kolkata. He received a Ph.D. in Combinatorics and Optimization in 1982 from the University of Waterloo under the joint supervision of Ronald C. Mullin and Paul Jacob Schellenberg.
In June 2015 Roy was removed from his post of director of ISI, just one month before the end of his appointment. This action was harshly criticised by the international academic community.
Currently, he is working on Combinatorics, and application of Statistics in Cryptology and Design of Experiments.
In 2015, Roy was awarded Padma Shri, India's fourth-highest civilian honour, recognizing his accomplishments and contribution to education. In 2019, Roy was appointed as the chairperson of the National Statistical Commission, Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation, Government of India.
See also
List of University of Waterloo people
References
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
Indian statisticians
Indian cryptographers
Ramakrishna Mission schools alumni
Recipients of the Padma Shri in literature & education
20th-century Indian mathematicians |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vagif%20Guliyev | Prof. Vagif Guliyev () is an Azerbaijani mathematician. He was born in Salyan district of Azerbaijan republic, USSR. He has earned Doctor of Sciences Degree from Steklov Institute of Mathematics, Moscow in 1994. He has written three books and more than 100 published articles. He is a full professor at Baku State University.
Research area
His research interests are:
Potential type operators on Lie groups or homogeneous spaces
Singular integral operators on Lie groups or homogeneous spaces
Function spaces on Lie groups or homogeneous spaces
Banach-valued function spaces of fractional smoothness
Integral operators on strictly pseudo-convex domains in Cn
Function spaces on strictly pseudo-convex domains in Cn
Solvability and other properties of invariant partial differential equations on Lie groups
Singular integrals, maximal functions and other integral operators, generated by Bessel differential operators
Bessel harmonic analysis and applications
External links
Vagif Guliyev's personal website
List of published articles
1957 births
Living people
20th-century Azerbaijani mathematicians
Academic staff of Baku State University
People from Salyan, Azerbaijan
21st-century Azerbaijani mathematicians |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea%20skimming | Sea skimming is a technique many anti-ship missiles and some fighter or strike aircraft use to avoid radar, infrared detection, and to lower probability of being shot down during their approach to the target.
Method
Sea-skimming anti-ship missiles try to fly as low as is practically achievable, which is almost always below 50 meters (150 ft), and is often near 2 meters (6 ft). When under attack, a warship can detect sea-skimming missiles only after they appear over the horizon (about 28 to 46 km from the ship), allowing about 25 to 60 seconds of warning.
Advantages
By flying low to the sea, missiles decrease the range at which the target ships can detect them by a significant amount. Flying at a lower altitude increases the amount of time the missile is under the horizon from the perspective of the target ship, making it harder to detect due to radar clutter from the sea and similar effects. The real-life success of sea skimming depends on its exact implementation, the sophistication of the detection equipment, as well as the infrared and radar signature of the missile. Sea skimming can significantly reduce the available response time that a ship's missile defenses have to work within, making these missiles significantly harder to defend against. Sea skimming can also increase the range of a missile, by relying on ground effects.
Disadvantages
The use of sea skimming increases the risk of water impact by the missile before reaching the target due to weather conditions, rogue waves, software bugs and other factors. Sea skimming also hinders target acquisition, as many of the principles that hinder the target's detection of the missile also hinder the missile's detection of the target. Sea skimming involves a significant computational load, increasing the required processing power and cost.
Possible defenses
Several systems are capable of defeating sea skimming weapons
Gun-Based CIWS
Missile-Based CIWS
Chaff
ECM
Use in major wars
French-made Exocet missiles were used by Argentina in the Falklands War (including the scuttling of HMS Sheffield) and by Iraq against the USS Stark in the Persian Gulf during the Iran–Iraq War. The Argentinian pilots of the Super Étendard planes that attacked HMS Sheffield were also skimming the sea at very low level. They increased their altitude only for a very short period to get final target information for the attack with their Agave radars. During the 2022 Russian Invasion of Ukraine, two Ukrainian-made R-360 Neptune sea-skimming cruise missiles were claimed to have struck and sank the Russian cruiser Moskva.
References
Anti-ship missiles
Low flying
Missile types
Naval warfare |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/More%20or%20Less%20%28radio%20programme%29 | More or Less is an investigative BBC Radio 4 programme about the accuracy of numbers and statistics in the public domain. The programme often addresses statistical issues which pertain to topics in the news.
The programme was created in 2001 by Michael Blastland as a one-off series of six programmes presented by Andrew Dilnot. The positive response to the show led to its becoming a regular programme, first with two series a year and since the winter series of 2008–2009, with three.
As well as the 30-minute Radio 4 programme, there is also a nine-minute BBC World Service edition that runs throughout the year. Both versions appear in the programme's podcast stream. The World Service edition either repeats an item from Radio 4 or has original material (usually when the Radio 4 show is off air). The programme is normally broadcast (as at September 2020) 9:02 to 9:30am on Wednesday.
In 2007, Blastland and Dilnot published a related book, The Tiger That Isn't: Seeing Through a World of Numbers about misuse of statistics.
Guests of the show have included Angus Deaton, Mark Lynas, Hannah Ritchie, and Richard Blundell.
Since October 2007 the show has been presented by Tim Harford.
Awards
Royal Statistical Society's 2010 award for statistical excellence in broadcast journalism
Mensa's award for promoting intelligence in public life
References
External links
The show's website
BBC Radio 4 programmes |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structured%20data%20analysis | Structured data analysis may refer to:
Structured data analysis (statistics) – the search for structure in a dataset
Structured data analysis (systems analysis) – a project management technique
Structured data mining – a machine learning and data analysis technique |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combinatorial%20data%20analysis | In statistics, combinatorial data analysis (CDA) is the study of data sets where the order in which objects are arranged is important. CDA can be used either to determine how well a given combinatorial construct reflects the observed data, or to search for a suitable combinatorial construct that does fit the data.
See also
Cluster analysis
Geometric data analysis
Structured data analysis (statistics)
Seriation (statistics)
References
Combinatorics
Data analysis
Combinatorial optimization |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adolf%20Zeising | Adolf Zeising (24 September 181027 April 1876) was a German psychologist, whose main interests were mathematics and philosophy.
Among his theories, Zeising claimed to have found the golden ratio expressed in the arrangement of branches along the stems of plants and of veins in leaves. He extended his research to the skeletons of animals and the branchings of their veins and nerves, to the proportions of chemical compounds and the geometry of crystals, even to the use of proportion in artistic endeavors. In these phenomena he saw the golden ratio operating as a universal law,
Many of his studies were followed by Gustav Fechner and Le Corbusier, who elaborated his studies of human proportion to develop the Modulor.
Works
(1846)
(1854)
(1855)
. (1855)
(1856)
(1856).
(1858)
(1861)
(1864)
(1865)
(1865)
(1869)
(1869)
(1873)
Notes
References
Nikolaus Wecklein: Zeising, Adolf. In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Band 55, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1910, pp. 404–411 (German)
External links
1810 births
1876 deaths
People from Ballenstedt
People from Anhalt-Bernburg
German psychologists
People of the Revolutions of 1848 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiguayante | Chiguayante () is a Chilean city and commune in Concepción Province, Biobío Region. It is part of Greater Concepción.
Demographics
According to the 2002 census of the National Statistics Institute, Chiguayante spans an area of and has 81,302 inhabitants (38,524 men and 42,778 women). Of these, 81,238 (99.9%) lived in urban areas and 64 (0.1%) in rural areas. The population grew by 44.2% (24,931 persons) between the 1992 and 2002 censuses. It had an estimated 2010 population of 119,265.
Administration
As a commune, Chiguayante is a third-level administrative division of Chile administered by a municipal council, headed by an alcalde who is directly elected every four years. The 2008-2012 alcalde is Tomás Solis Nova (PS).
Within the electoral divisions of Chile, Chiguayante is represented in the Chamber of Deputies by José Miguel Ortiz (PDC) and Enrique Van Rysselberghe (UDI) as part of the 44th electoral district, (together with Concepción and San Pedro de la Paz). The commune is represented in the Senate by Alejandro Navarro Brain (MAS) and Hosain Sabag Castillo (PDC) as part of the 12th senatorial constituency (Biobío-Cordillera).
References
External links
Municipality of Chiguayante
Communes of Chile
Populated places in Concepción Province
1996 establishments in Chile |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archimedean%20circle | In geometry, an Archimedean circle is any circle constructed from an arbelos that has the same radius as each of Archimedes' twin circles. If the arbelos is normed such that the diameter of its outer (largest) half circle has a length of 1 and r denotes the radiius of any of the inner half circles, then the radius ρ of such an Archimedean circle is given by
There are over fifty different known ways to construct Archimedean circles.
Origin
An Archimedean circle was first constructed by Archimedes in his Book of Lemmas. In his book, he constructed what is now known as Archimedes' twin circles.
Radius
If and are the radii of the small semicircles of the arbelos, the radius of an Archimedean circle is equal to
This radius is thus .
The Archimedean circle with center (as in the figure at right) is tangent to the tangents from the centers of the small semicircles to the other small semicircle.
Other Archimedean circles finders
Leon Bankoff
Leon Bankoff constructed other Archimedean circles called Bankoff's triplet circle and Bankoff's quadruplet circle.
Thomas Schoch
In 1978 Thomas Schoch found a dozen more Archimedean circles (the Schoch circles) that have been published in 1998. He also constructed what is known as the Schoch line.
Peter Y. Woo
Peter Y. Woo considered the Schoch line, and with it, he was able to create a family of infinitely many Archimedean circles known as the Woo circles.
Frank Power
In the summer of 1998, Frank Power introduced four more Archimedes circles known as Archimedes' quadruplets.
Archimedean circles in Wasan geometry (Japanese geometry)
In 1831, Nagata (永田岩三郎遵道) proposed a sangaku problem involving two Archimedean circles, which are denoted by W6 and W7 in [3].
In 1853, Ootoba (大鳥羽源吉守敬) proposed a sangaku problem involving an Archimedean circle.
References
Arbelos
Geometric shapes
Circle packing |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary%20W.%20Gray | Mary Lee Wheat Gray (born April 8, 1938) is an American mathematician, statistician, and lawyer. She is the author of books and papers in the fields of mathematics, mathematics education, computer science, applied statistics, economic equity, discrimination law, and academic freedom. She is currently on the Board of Advisers for POMED (Project on Middle East Democracy) and is the chair of the Board of Directors of AMIDEAST (America-Mideast Educational and Training Services, Inc.).
Biography and career
Gray completed her undergraduate degree from Hastings College and her Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of Kansas. She also completed her J.D. from Washington College of Law. She is a member of the District of Columbia and U.S. Supreme Court bars.
Gray was one of the founding members of the Association for Women in Mathematics (AWM) and the first President of the AWM from 1971 to 1973. As reported in A Brief History of the Association for Women in Mathematics: The Presidents' Perspectives, by Lenore Blum, "As Judy Green remembers (and Chandler Davis, early AWM friend, concurs): 'The formal idea of women getting together and forming a caucus was first made publicly at a MAG [Mathematics Action Group] meeting in 1971 ... in Atlantic City. Joanne Darken, then an instructor at Temple University and now at the Community College of Philadelphia, stood up at the meeting and suggested that the women present remain and form a caucus. I have been able to document six women who remained: me (I was a graduate student at Maryland at the time), Joanne Darken, Mary [W.] Gray (she was already at American University), Diane Laison (then an instructor at Temple), Gloria Olive (a Senior Lecturer at the University of Otago, New Zealand, who was visiting the U.S. at the time) and Annie Selden...It's not absolutely clear what happened next, except that I've personally always thought that Mary was responsible for getting the whole thing organized ....'". Mary W. Gray was the early organizer, placing an advertisement in the February 1971 Notices of the AMS, and writing the first issue of the AWM Newsletter that May. Again as reported by Lenore Blum, "What I remember hearing about Mary [W.] Gray and the Atlantic City Meetings, indeed what perked my curiosity, was an entirely different event, one that was also to alter dramatically the character of the mathematics community. In those years the AMS was governed by what could only be called an "old boys network," closed to all but those in the inner circle. Mary challenged that by sitting in on the Council meeting in Atlantic City. When she was told she had to leave, she refused saying she would wait until the police came. (Mary relates the story somewhat differently: When she was told she had to leave, she responded she could find no rules in the by-laws restricting attendance at Council meetings. She was then told it was by "gentlemen's agreement." Naturally Mary replied "Well, obviously I'm no gentleman.") After |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonio%20Br%C3%BA | Antonio Brú Espino (born 1962) is Theoretical physicist and permanent professor in the Departament of Applied Mathematics at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Brú received his PhD in 1995 from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid, in physics, with advisor Miguel Ángel Rodríguez. He began his research career in 1989 at the Centro de Investigaciones Energéticas, Medioambientales y Tecnológicas (CIEMAT) in the field of anomalous transport and complex systems. In 1993, he established his own research group to study tumor growth. In 2002, he moved to the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC).
Cancer research
Brú is known for the controversy surrounding his research on cancer, which states (among other things) that:
The defining factor that determines the growth of solid tumours is not the search for nutrients, but the search for space to grow.
Solid tumours may be treated solely through an enhancement of the immune response, achievable with high doses of Neupogen, a granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) routinely used in Oncology in order to recover the level of these blood cells after Chemotherapy.
Brú's theory stems from his mathematical research on the Fractal growth of tumour cell colonies in vitro. This growth, according to his studies, would display a set of distinct characteristics with regards to growth patterns and would imply a greater proliferation around tumour boundaries. Brú's team referred this growth pattern as the Universal Dynamics of Tumour Growth. This theory is currently recognised as one of the possible equations to describe tumour growth.
The rationale for the use of Neupogen would be that the concurrence of a massive amount of neutrophils near the edge of the tumour may result in a massive population in the concavities at the tumour edge, consequently blocking its growth. He has published his research in Europhysics Letters (2003), the Biophysical Journal (2003) (where he expands on the MBE theory), and in Physical Review Letters (2004).
His alleged success on the two patients, the fact that Brú comes from the Complutense University, his collaboration with researchers from the Spanish Scientific Research Council CSIC and the San Carlos Hospital in Madrid, as well as the mix of mathematical and biological research, made his theory a breaking news event in Spain.
Brú has publicly asked for the possibility of doing clinical trials in order to confirm his results, but this has been impossible to date. It was nearly done in the Ramón y Cajal hospital in Madrid, but there was no consensus due to conditions deemed unacceptable by Brú's team:
A statistically insignificant number of patients;
The addition of a mortality case in the information given for patient consent of which Brú had no knowledge of.
The animosity from a potential team member.
In June 2007 Brú presented a new proposal for a clinical trial to the Fundación Puigvert in Barcelona for Prostate cancer, but it was rejected by said Foundation.
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoshio%20Mikami | was a Japanese mathematician and historian of Japanese mathematics. He was born February 16, 1875, in Kotachi, Hiroshima prefecture. He attended the High School of Tohoku University, and in 1911 was admitted to the Imperial University of Tokyo. He studied history of Japanese and Chinese mathematics. In 1913, he published "The Development of Mathematics in China and Japan" in Leipzig. This book consisted of two parts with 47 chapters. Part one has 21 chapters that describe in depth several important Chinese mathematicians and mathematical classics including Liu Hui, Shen Kuo, Qin Jiushao, Sun Tzu, The Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art, Mathematical Treatise in Nine Sections, Li Ye, Zhu Shijie and study on π. Part II deals with important wasan mathematicians and their works, including Kambei Mori, Yoshida Koyu, Kowa Seki, Imamura Chisho, Takahara Kisshu, Kurushima, Ajima Chokuyen, Aida Ammei, Shiraishi Chochu, Skabe Kohan, and Hagiwara Teisuke.
He died on December 31, 1950, in Hiroshima.
References
External links
David Eugene Smith, Yoshio Mikami: A History of Japanese Mathematics Open Court Publishing, Chicago 1914
20th-century Japanese mathematicians
20th-century Japanese historians
University of Tokyo alumni
1875 births
1950 deaths
Historians of mathematics |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2008%E2%80%9309%20Turkish%20Basketball%20League | The 2008–09 Turkish Basketball League was the 43rd season of the top professional basketball league in Turkey. Efes Pilsen won the championship.
Regular season standings
Statistics correct as of June 19, 2009
Clubs and Arenas
The league consists of the following member clubs:
Playoffs
External links
Turkish Basketball League Official Website
Turkish Basketball Federation Official Website
TBLStat.net
Turk Telekom Fans' site
References
Turkish Basketball Super League seasons
Turkish
1 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger%20Howe | Roger Howe may refer to:
Roger Evans Howe (born 1945), professor of mathematics at Yale University
Roger T. Howe (born 1957), professor of electrical engineering at Stanford University |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melkite%20Greek%20Catholic%20Eparchy%20of%20Nossa%20Senhora%20do%20Para%C3%ADso%20em%20S%C3%A3o%20Paulo | Eparchy of Nossa Senhora do Paraíso em São Paulo () is an eparchy located in the city of São Paulo in the Ecclesiastical province of São Paulo in Brazil.
Territory and statistics
The eparchy includes all Melkite Catholic faithful of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church in Brazil. Its eparchial seat is the city of São Paulo, where is located the Nossa Senhora do Paraíso Cathedral.
The territory is divided into five parishes. In 2013 there were 436,000 Catholics.
History
On 14 November 1951 was erected the Ordinariate of Brazil to the Eastern Rite Catholics whom all Melkite Catholics belonged till November 29, 1971 when by Papal bull Haec Romana of Paul VI was established the Melkite Greek Catholic Eparchy of Nossa Senhora do Paraíso em São Paulo.
Leadership
Bishops of Nossa Senhora do Paraíso em São Paulo (Greek-Melkite Rite) and Coadjutor
Bishop Elias Coueter (November 29, 1971 – June 22, 1978)
Bishop Spiridon Mattar (June 22, 1978 – April 20, 1990)
Bishop Pierre Mouallem, S.M.S.P. (April 20, 1990 – July 29, 1998), appointed Archbishop of Akka [San Giovanni d’Acri; Tolemaide] (Melkite Greek), Israel
Archbishop (personal title) Fares Maakaroun (December 18, 1999 – July 21, 2014)
Bishop Joseph Gébara (October 31, 2013 – July 21, 2014), Coadjutor Bishop
Bishop Joseph Gébara (later Archbishop) (July 21, 2014 – February 20, 2018), appointed Archbishop of Petra e Filadelfia (Melkite Greek), Jordan
Bishop Sérgio de Deus Borges (May 23, 2018 – June 17, 2019), Apostolic Administrator
Bishop George Khoury (since June 17, 2019)
References
External links
http://www.pgc-lb.org/fre/melkite_greek_catholic_church/Eparchy-of-Sao-Paulo-Brazil
GCatholic.org
Catholic Hierarchy
Eastern Catholic dioceses in Brazil
Christian organizations established in 1971
Nossa Senhora do Paraiso em Sao Paulo, Melkite Greek Catholic Eparchy of
Melkite Greek Catholic eparchies
Roman Catholic dioceses and prelatures established in the 20th century
Melkite Greek Catholic Church in Brazil |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1899%E2%80%931900%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1899–1900 season.
East
West
Final
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|18 March 1900
|}
Grasshopper Club Zürich won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1899-1900 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1899–1900 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1901%E2%80%9302%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1901–02 season.
East
Central
West
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|6 April 1902
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|13 April 1902
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|20 April 1902
|}
FC Zürich won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1901-02 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1901–02 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1902%E2%80%9303%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1902–03 season.
East
Central
West
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|22 March 1903
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|29 March 1903
|}
The match between Zürich and Neuchâtel was not played because the two teams no longer competing for the title.
Young Boys Bern won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1902-03 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1902–03 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1903%E2%80%9304%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of association football in Switzerland during the 1903–04 season.
East
Central
Play-off
|}
West
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|27 March 1904
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|10 April 1904
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|17 April 1904
|}
FC St. Gallen won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1903-04 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1903–04 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1904%E2%80%9305%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1904–05 season.
East
Central
NB: the match FC Basel - Young Boys Bern ended with the final score 3-4. Falsely, however, the result was originally reported as a 4-4 draw. Thus Old Boys would have finished in first position and were nominated as participants for the finals. After the mistake was noticed the W-D-L records and points totals in the league table were corrected and the necessary play-off match was arranged. However, the total goals remained without modification and consequently this leads to the fact that most older sources list the goal records for Young Boys and FC Basel as 35-11 and 19-20 respectively. Obviously this is arithmetically incorrect.
Play-off
|}
West
Play-off
|}
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|2 April 1905
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|9 April 1905
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|16 April 1905
|}
Grasshopper Club Zürich won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1904-05 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1904–05 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1905%E2%80%9306%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1905–06 season.
East
Group 1
Group 2
East final
|}
Central
West
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|22 April 1906
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|7 May 1906
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|14 May 1906
|}
FC Winterthur won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1905-06 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1905–06 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1906%E2%80%9307%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1906–07 season.
East
Table
Central
Table
West
Table
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|28 April 1907
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|5 May 1907
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|12 May 1907
|}
Servette Genf won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1906-07 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1906–07 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1907%E2%80%9308%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1907–08 season.
East
Table
West
Table
Final
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|31 May 1908
|}
FC Winterthur won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1907-08 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1907–08 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1908%E2%80%9309%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1908–09 season.
East
Table
West
Table
Final
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|6 June 1909
|}
Young Boys Bern won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1908-09 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1908–09 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1909%E2%80%9310%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1909–10 season.
East
Table
Aarau qualified.
Central
Table
Young Boys qualified.
West
Table
Servette qualified.
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|5 June 1910
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|12 June 1910
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|26 June 1910
|}
Young Boys Bern won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1909-10 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1909–10 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1910%E2%80%9311%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1910–11 season.
East
Table
Central
Table
West
Table
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|14 May 1911
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|28 May 1911
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|11 June 1911
|}
Young Boys Bern won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1910-11 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1910–11 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1911%E2%80%9312%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1911–12 season.
East
Table
Central
Table
West
Table
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|19 May 1912
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|2 June 1912
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|9 June 1912
|}
FC Aarau won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1911-12 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1911–12 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1912%E2%80%9313%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1912–13 season.
East
Table
Central
Table
West
Table
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|25 May 1913
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|8 June 1913
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|15 June 1913
|}
Lausanne Sports won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1912-13 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1912–13 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1913%E2%80%9314%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1913–14 season.
East
Table
Central
Table
West
Table
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|26 April 1914
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|3 May 1914
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|10 May 1914
|}
FC Aarau won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1913-14 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1913–14 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1914%E2%80%9315%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1914–15 season.
East
Central A
Central B
West
Semifinals
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|2 May 1915
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|30 May 1915
|}
Final
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|6 June 1915
|}
Brühl St. Gallen won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1914-15 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1914–15 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1915%E2%80%9316%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | This article gives statistics of the Swiss Super League in the 1915–16 association football season.
East
Table
Central
Table
West
Table
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|16 April 1916
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|18 June 1916
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|25 June 1916
|}
Cantonal Neuchâtel won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1915-16 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1915–16 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1916%E2%80%9317%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1916–17 season.
East
Table
Central
Table
West
Table
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|3 June 1917
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|17 June 1917
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|21 June 1917
|}
FC Winterthur won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1916-17 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1916–17 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1917%E2%80%9318%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1917–18 season.
East
Table
Central
Table
West
Table
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|17 March 1918
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|14 April 1918
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|5 May 1918
|}
Servette Genf won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1917-18 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1917–18 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1918%E2%80%9319%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1918–19 season.
East
Table
Central
Table
West
Table
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|1 June 1919
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|15 June 1919
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|22 June 1919
|}
Etoile La Chaux-de-Fonds won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1918-19 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1918–19 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1919%E2%80%9320%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1919–20 season.
East
Table
Results
Central
Table
Results
West
Table
Results
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|9 May 1920
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|13 May 1920
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|23 May 1920
Young Boys Bern won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1919-20 at RSSSF
References
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1919–20 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1920%E2%80%9321%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1920–21 season.
East
Table
Results
Central
Table
Results
West
Table
Results
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|17 April 1921
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|24 April 1921
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|8 May 1921
Grasshopper Club Zürich won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1920-21 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1920–21 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1921%E2%80%9322%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1921–22 season.
East
Table
Results
Central
Table
Results
West
Table
Results
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|28 May 1922
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|18 June 1922
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|25 June 1922
Servette Genf won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1921-22 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1921–22 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1922%E2%80%9323%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1922–23 season.
No championship title awarded
The team Young Boys sportingly ended the season as Central group winners. But before the start of the championship play-offs, the qualification match FC Biel-Bienne versus FC Bern (the game ended 3–1) from 25.02.1923 was awarded 0–3 due to ineligible players of FC Biel-Bienne. So both Young Boys Bern and FC Bern were level with 22 points and consequently a play-off was to be held for the regional championship. Young Boys withdrew from this match. Thus FC Bern continued to the finals, which they won. After the play-offs finals had been completed, the qualification match Basel versus FC Bern (the game ended 0–4) from 04.02.1923 was awarded 3–0 forfait because FC Bern had played an ineligible player. After this decision Young Boys were again winners of the regional group. The date of this decision was in September 1923 and there was not enough time left for a new Play-off Final before the next season started. Therefore, no Swiss championship title was awarded for 1922/23 season.
East
Table
Results
Central
Table
Results
West
Table
Results
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|6 May 1923
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|13 May 1923
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|27 May 1923
References
Sources
Switzerland 1922-23 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1922–23 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1923%E2%80%9324%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1923–24 season.
East
Table
Results
Central
Table
Results
West
Table
Results
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|13 April 1924
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|4 May 1924
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|11 May 1924
FC Zürich won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1923-24 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1923–24 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1924%E2%80%9325%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1924–25 season.
East
Table
Results
Central
Table
Results
West
Table
Results
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|3 May 1925
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|17 May 1925
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|7 June 1925
Servette Genf won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1924-25 at RSSSF
Seasons in Swiss football
Swiss Football League seasons
1924–25 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1925%E2%80%9326%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1925–26 season.
East
Table
Results
Central
Table
Results
West
Table
Results
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|13 June 1926
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|20 June 1926
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|27 June 1926
Championship play-off
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|4 July 1926
Servette Genf won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1925-26 at RSSSF
Swiss Football League seasons
1925–26 in Swiss football
Swiss |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1926%E2%80%9327%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1926–27 season.
East
Table
Results
Central
Table
Results
West
Table
Results
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|8 May 1927
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|15 May 1927
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|22 May 1927
Grasshopper Club Zürich won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1926-27 at RSSSF
Swiss Serie A seasons
Swiss
1926–27 in Swiss football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1927%E2%80%9328%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1927–28 season.
East
Table
Results
Central
Table
Results
West
Table
Results
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|22 April 1928
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|29 April 1928
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|13 May 1928
Grasshopper Club Zürich won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1927-28 at RSSSF
Swiss Serie A seasons
Swiss
Football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1928%E2%80%9329%20Swiss%20Serie%20A | Statistics of Swiss Super League in the 1928–29 season.
East
Table
Results
Central
Table
Results
West
Table
Results
Final
Table
Results
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|9 June 1929
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|16 June 1929
|-
|colspan="3" style="background-color:#D0D0D0" align=center|30 June 1929
Young Boys Bern won the championship.
Sources
Switzerland 1928-29 at RSSSF
Swiss Serie A seasons
Swiss
Football |
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