Cayley table

Named after the 19th century British mathematician Arthur Cayley, a Cayley table describes the structure of a finite group by arranging all the possible products of all the group's elements in a square table reminiscent of an addition or multiplication table. Many properties of a group  such as whether or not it is abelian, which elements are inverses of which elements, and the size and contents of the group's center  can be discovered from its Cayley table.

A simple example of a Cayley table is the one for the group {1, 1} under ordinary multiplication:

× 1 1
1 11
1 11
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