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entiere

Entière, in mathematics, is the term used in French (and in related contexts) to describe a function that is holomorphic on the entire complex plane. In English mathematics, the standard term is “entire function.” Equivalently, a function f: C → C is entire if it is complex differentiable at every point of the complex plane, and this implies that around any a ∈ C there exists a power series expansion f(z) = ∑_{n=0}^∞ c_n (z − a)^n with infinite radius of convergence.

Examples of entire functions include polynomials, the exponential function e^z, sine and cosine functions sin z

Key properties include that the zeros of a non-identically-zero entire function are isolated. Liouville’s theorem states

Terminology and usage: the term entiere is the feminine form used when describing a feminine noun, such

and
cos
z,
and
many
other
transcendental
functions.
Entire
functions
are
analytic
everywhere
and
hence
infinitely
differentiable.
that
any
bounded
entire
function
must
be
constant.
The
behavior
of
an
entire
function
at
infinity
is
described
by
whether
it
is
a
polynomial
(infinity
is
a
pole)
or
a
non-polynomial
(infinity
is
an
essential
singularity).
Entire
functions
can
be
studied
by
their
growth
(order
and
type)
and
by
factorization
results
such
as
Hadamard’s
factorization.
as
“fonction
entière”
in
French;
in
English
texts,
the
term
“entire
function”
is
standard.
The
concept
is
central
in
complex
analysis,
providing
a
clean
setting
in
which
holomorphic
behavior
is
understood
globally
on
the
complex
plane.