Q: Is hierarchy a system or organization in which people or groups are ranked one above the other according to status or authority? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Are hierarchies the subsumptive containment hierarchy and the compositional containment hierarchy? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is hierarchy a partially ordered set or poset? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is hierarchy through the Nested clusters? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is hierarchy a direct extrapolation of the nested hierarchy concept? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Are hierarchies always the same? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is hierarchy most effective in representing simple relationships? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is hierarchy demonstrated in class inheritance in object-oriented programming? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is hierarchy available""? ¶
A: Yes, Dissertation Abstracts International. University of Toronto.
Q: Is hierarchy an ordering of the parts that make up a system—the system is "composed" of these parts? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is hierarchy a classification of object classes from the general to the specific? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is hierarchy a hierarchical ordering of nested sets? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is hierarchy Available Using a Hierarchy-Based Prior" "? ¶
A: Yes, Bayesian Analysis.
Q: Are hierarchies present in all parts of society: in businesses? ¶
A: Yes, and schools, families, etc.
Q: Are hierarchies so infused into daily life that they are viewed as trivial? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is hierarchy "taxonomic hierarchy" and "IS-A hierarchy"? ¶
A: Yes, The last term describes the relationship between each level—a lower-level object "is a" member of the higher class.
Q: Are hierarchies present within numerous systems? ¶
A: Yes, and including organizations and classification schemes.
Q: Are hierarchies characterized by bi-directional causation? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Are hierarchies the organizational schemes behind taxonomies and systematic classifications? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is hierarchy typically depicted as a pyramid? ¶
A: Yes, where the height of a level represents that level's status and width of a level represents the quantity of items at that level relative to the whole.
Q: Is hierarchy also important for proper organization of files on computers? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is hierarchy often not viewed as a hierarchy at all? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is hierarchy the hierarchy of life? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is hierarchy "composed" of its children? ¶
A: Yes.