adjectives - What is the difference between "dichotomous", "binary", "boolean", etc.?


To classify species we use a method called: dichotomous biological key. It works base on true and false cycles. In computer sciences true and fulse working is called boolean and binary is a 0 and 1 system (which is like true and false).


What is the difference between them? Can I use term "Binary biological key"? Are these really different?


(I have edited this question following Daniel's and MT-Head's comments.)



Answer



Boolean refers to Boolean algebra, named after George Boole.


While Boolean true/false values have other uses in computer science - a heavy use of it today - the thing that makes it Boolean isn't just that it can such values can only be true or false, but that one can also do Boolean algebra on it (e.g. in the expression x ∧ (y ∨ ¬z) expressed in computer code as e.g. x && (y || !z) (C-style), x AND (y OR NOT z) (Basic-style) and others). If we had a programming language that allowed of branching on a two-way value, but didn't allow for such Boolean algebra, then such values wouldn't truly be Boolean.


You don't do Boolean algebra with a dichotomous key, so it would would be incorrect to call it Boolean.


Binary means anything involving two things. A dichotomous key is hence a binary approach, but this meaning is different to some more specific meanings of binary (it has nothing to do with the binary number system, for example).


A dichotomy refers to splitting something into two parts. Hence everything that is dichotomous is binary, but not everything that is binary is dichotomous.


So, Boolean is wrong, binary is valid, but not as precise as dichotomous which is completely correct.


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