Examples of using Trivial example in English and their translations into Portuguese
{-}
- 
                        Colloquial
                    
- 
                        Official
                    
- 
                        Medicine
                    
- 
                        Financial
                    
- 
                        Ecclesiastic
                    
- 
                        Ecclesiastic
                    
- 
                        Computer
                    
- 
                        Official/political
                    
A trivial example is this.
Of course this is a trivial example.
A trivial example might look like the following.
The identity map is a trivial example of an involution.
A trivial example is better than no example. .
An apparently trivial example suffices to back this assertion.
A trivial example is that of someone using a text editor, and wanting to give a form to a paragraph.
This is a trivial example of how rc. conf(5) variables can control an rc.d script.
A trivial example is this: Newton found the law of gravity, which goes like one over the square of the distance between the things gravitated.
A trivial example is Newton's formula of gravitational attraction.
The trivial example of such a pattern is the input pattern only consisting of zeros.
As a trivial example, a machine implementing a finitary decision tree will always halt.
A less trivial example of a redundancy is the classical equivalence between and.
To take a trivial example, which of us ever undertakes laborious physical exercise, except to obtain some advantage from it?
Even trivial examples are valuable, because what is trivial  to the writer is not necessarily trivial  to the reader.
The most trivial example of this is the term Ω in the lambda calculus, shown below in Scheme: Ω is an infinite recursion, and therefore has no normal form.
A trivial example: how many people who studied"Computer Science" learned about the"Scientific Method" and the importance of"Experimentation" on that course?
A trivial example shows the minimal requirements, a serious example  shows actual use, and an in-depth example  demonstrates unusual or non-obvious functionality.
In this trivial example, it is obvious that b c a′ b c+ a b c{\displaystyle bc=a'bc+abc}, but the simplified form has both fewer product terms, and the term has fewer variables.
A less trivial example from mathematical analysis are the concepts of uniform and pointwise continuity, whose definitions differ only by an exchange in the positions of two quantifiers.
Trivial examples include calibration of instruments, testing reliability of scales/measures, assessment of the equivalence of measurement tools, judgment in tests of ability, tests of repeatability or reproducibility, and diagnostic analysis interpersonal and intraindividual agreement and psychometric agreement temporal stability.
A less trivial example of a redundancy is the classical equivalence between¬P∨ Q and P→ Q. Therefore, a classical-based logical system does not need the conditional operator"→" if"¬"(not) and"∨"(or) are already in use, or may use the"→" only as a syntactic sugar for a compound having one negation and one disjunction.
These are trivial marketing examples.
These are trivial marketing examples, I accept.
Examples include trivial crystal-like growth, template replication, and Langton's loops.
Example trivial than a quarter of an hour ago.