: In the remainder of the article we shall denote quasigroup
multiplication simply by juxtaposition. Quasigroups have the
cancellation property: if , then . This follows from the uniqueness of left division of
ab or
ac by
a. Similarly, if , then . The Latin square property of quasigroups implies that, given any two of the three variables in , the third variable is uniquely determined.
Multiplication operators The definition of a quasigroup can be treated as conditions on the left and right
multiplication operators , defined by :
Lx(
y) =
xy :
Rx(
y) =
yx The definition says that both mappings are
bijections from
Q to itself. A magma
Q is a quasigroup precisely when all these operators, for every
x in
Q, are bijective. The inverse mappings are left and right division, that is, : : In this notation the identities among the quasigroup's multiplication and division operations (stated in the section on
universal algebra) are : : : : where denotes the identity mapping on
Q.
Latin squares The multiplication table of a finite quasigroup is a
Latin square: an table filled with
n different symbols in such a way that each symbol occurs exactly once in each row and exactly once in each column. Conversely, every Latin square can be taken as the multiplication table of a quasigroup in many ways: the border row (containing the column headers) and the border column (containing the row headers) can each be any permutation of the elements. See
Small Latin squares and quasigroups.
Infinite quasigroups For a
countably infinite quasigroup
Q, it is possible to imagine an infinite array in which every row and every column corresponds to some element
q of
Q, and where the element is in the row corresponding to
a and the column responding to
b. In this situation too, the Latin square property says that each row and each column of the infinite array will contain every possible value precisely once. For an
uncountably infinite quasigroup, such as the group of non-zero
real numbers under multiplication, the Latin square property still holds, although the name is somewhat unsatisfactory, as it is not possible to produce the array of combinations to which the above idea of an infinite array extends since the real numbers cannot all be written in a
sequence. (This is somewhat misleading however, as the reals can be written in a sequence of length {{tmath|1= \mathfrak{c} }}, assuming the
well-ordering theorem.)
Inverse properties The binary operation of a quasigroup is
invertible in the sense that both
Lx and
Rx, the
left and right multiplication operators, are bijective, and hence
invertible. Every loop element has a unique left and right inverse given by : : A loop is said to have (
two-sided)
inverses if for all
x. In this case the inverse element is usually denoted by −1. There are some stronger notions of inverses in loops that are often useful: • A loop has the
left inverse property if for all
x and
y. Equivalently, or . • A loop has the
right inverse property if for all
x and
y. Equivalently, or . • A loop has the
antiautomorphic inverse property if or, equivalently, if . • A loop has the
weak inverse property when if and only if . This may be stated in terms of inverses via or equivalently . A loop has the
inverse property if it has both the left and right inverse properties. Inverse property loops also have the antiautomorphic and weak inverse properties. In fact, any loop that satisfies any two of the above four identities has the inverse property and therefore satisfies all four. Any loop that satisfies the left, right, or antiautomorphic inverse properties automatically has two-sided inverses. == Morphisms ==