Note: this article uses the English convention for displaying Young diagrams and tableaux.
Diagrams A
Young diagram (also called a
Ferrers diagram, particularly when represented using dots) is a finite collection of boxes, or cells, arranged in left-justified rows, with the row lengths in non-increasing order. Listing the number of boxes in each row gives a
partition of a non-negative integer , the total number of boxes of the diagram. The Young diagram is said to be of shape , and it carries the same information as that partition. Containment of one Young diagram in another defines a
partial ordering on the set of all partitions, which is in fact a
lattice structure, known as
Young's lattice. Listing the number of boxes of a Young diagram in each column gives another partition, the
conjugate or
transpose partition of ; one obtains a Young diagram of that shape by reflecting the original diagram along its main diagonal. There is almost universal agreement that in labeling boxes of Young diagrams by pairs of integers, the first index selects the row of the diagram, and the second index selects the box within the row. Nevertheless, two distinct conventions exist to display these diagrams, and consequently tableaux: the first places each row below the previous one, the second stacks each row on top of the previous one. Since the former convention is mainly used by
Anglophones while the latter is often preferred by
Francophones, it is customary to refer to these conventions respectively as the
English notation and the
French notation; for instance, in his book on
symmetric functions,
Macdonald advises readers preferring the French convention to "read this book upside down in a mirror" (Macdonald 1979, p. 2). This nomenclature probably started out as jocular. The English notation corresponds to the one universally used for matrices, while the French notation is closer to the convention of
Cartesian coordinates; however, French notation differs from that convention by placing the vertical coordinate first. The figure on the right shows, using the English notation, the Young diagram corresponding to the partition (5, 4, 1) of the number 10. The conjugate partition, measuring the column lengths, is (3, 2, 2, 2, 1).
Arm and leg length In many applications, for example when defining
Jack functions, it is convenient to define the
arm length aλ(
s) of a box
s as the number of boxes to the right of
s in the diagram λ in English notation. Similarly, the
leg length lλ(
s) is the number of boxes below
s. The
hook length of a box
s is the number of boxes to the right of
s or below
s in English notation, including the box
s itself; in other words, the hook length is
aλ(
s) +
lλ(
s) + 1.
Tableaux A
Young tableau is obtained by filling in the boxes of the Young diagram with symbols taken from some
alphabet, which is usually required to be a
totally ordered set. Originally that alphabet was a set of indexed variables , , ..., but now one usually uses a set of numbers for brevity. In their original application to
representations of the symmetric group, Young tableaux have distinct entries, arbitrarily assigned to boxes of the diagram. A tableau is called
standard if the entries in each row and each column are increasing. The number of distinct standard Young tableaux on entries is given by the
involution numbers :1, 1, 2, 4, 10, 26, 76, 232, 764, 2620, 9496, ... . In other applications, it is natural to allow the same number to appear more than once (or not at all) in a tableau. A tableau is called
semistandard, or
column strict, if the entries weakly increase along each row and strictly increase down each column. Recording the number of times each number appears in a tableau gives a sequence known as the
weight of the tableau. Thus the standard Young tableaux are precisely the semistandard tableaux of weight (1,1,...,1), which requires every integer up to to occur exactly once. In a standard Young tableau, the integer k is a
descent if k+1 appears in a row strictly below k. The sum of the descents is called the
major index of the tableau. therefore the shape of a skew diagram cannot always be determined from the set of filled squares only. Although many properties of skew tableaux only depend on the filled squares, some operations defined on them do require explicit knowledge of and , so it is important that skew tableaux do record this information: two distinct skew tableaux may differ only in their shape, while they occupy the same set of squares, each filled with the same entries. Young tableaux can be identified with skew tableaux in which is the empty partition (0) (the unique partition of 0). Any skew semistandard tableau of shape with positive integer entries gives rise to a sequence of partitions (or Young diagrams), by starting with , and taking for the partition places further in the sequence the one whose diagram is obtained from that of by adding all the boxes that contain a value ≤ in ; this partition eventually becomes equal to . Any pair of successive shapes in such a sequence is a skew shape whose diagram contains at most one box in each column; such shapes are called
horizontal strips. This sequence of partitions completely determines , and it is in fact possible to define (skew) semistandard tableaux as such sequences, as is done by Macdonald (Macdonald 1979, p. 4). This definition incorporates the partitions and in the data comprising the skew tableau. == Overview of applications ==