Rings that are
fields are most familiar: The projective line over
GF(2) has three elements: , , and . Its homography group is the
permutation group on these three. The ring
Z/3Z, or GF(3), has the elements 1, 0, and −1; its projective line has the four elements , , , since both 1 and −1 are
units. The homography group on this projective line has 12 elements, also described with matrices or as permutations.
Over discrete rings Consider when
n is a
composite number. If
p and
q are distinct primes dividing
n, then and are
maximal ideals in and by
Bézout's identity there are
a and
b in
Z such that , so that is in but it is not an image of an element under the canonical embedding. The whole of is filled out by elements , where and ,
A× being the units of . The instances are given here for
n = 6, 10, and 12, where according to
modular arithmetic the group of units of the ring is , , and respectively. Modular arithmetic will confirm that, in each table, a given letter represents multiple points. In these tables a point is labeled by
m in the row at the table bottom and
n in the column at the left of the table. For instance, the
point at infinity , where
v is a unit of the ring. The extra points can be associated with , the rationals in the
extended complex upper-half plane. The group of homographies on is called a
principal congruence subgroup. For the
rational numbers
Q, homogeneity of coordinates means that every element of P1(
Q) may be represented by an element of P1(
Z). Similarly, a homography of P1(
Q) corresponds to an element of the
modular group, the automorphisms of P1(
Z).
Over continuous rings The projective line over a
division ring results in a single auxiliary point . Examples include the
real projective line, the
complex projective line, and the projective line over
quaternions. These examples of
topological rings have the projective line as their
one-point compactifications. The case of the
complex number field
C has the
Möbius group as its homography group. The projective line over the
dual numbers was described by Josef Grünwald in 1906. This ring includes a nonzero
nilpotent n satisfying . The plane of dual numbers has a projective line including a line of points .
Isaak Yaglom has described it as an "inversive Galilean plane" that has the
topology of a
cylinder when the supplementary line is included. Similarly, if
A is a
local ring, then P1(
A) is formed by adjoining points corresponding to the elements of the
maximal ideal of
A. The projective line over the ring
M of
split-complex numbers introduces auxiliary lines and Using
stereographic projection the plane of split-complex numbers is
closed up with these lines to a
hyperboloid of one sheet. The projective line over
M may be called the
Minkowski plane when characterized by behaviour of hyperbolas under homographic mapping. == Modules ==