Quasicyclic groups are of type QuasicyclicGroup, and also of type QuasicyclicSubgroup.
Not only are quasicyclic groups not finite:
They are not even finitely generated.
A quasicyclic group is abelian, but not cyclic.
Elements of an additive quasicyclic -group are rationals with denominator a power of .
The group operation is rational addition modulo .
The rational number is not a member of because its denominator is not a power of .
Every integer belongs to and represents the group identity.
Every element of has order a power of .
Finitely generated subgroups of are finite and cyclic.
The subgroup lattice of a quasicyclic group is a chain, infinite in length. However, we can visualize the subgroup lattice of finite subgroups of quasicyclic groups.
An additive quasicyclic -group is isomorphic to the multiplicative quasicyclic -group (for the same prime ).
The assign option to the AreIsomorphic command affords you the ability to obtain an explicit isomorphism.
Check that H is isomorphic to the cyclic permutation group of the same order.
The elements of and are distinct, though they are isomorphic.
Since quasicyclic groups are infinite, it is not possible to compute all of their elements.
Similarly, you can iterate over the elements of a quasicyclic group but, as the group is infinite, you need to provide a termination condition, as illustrated in the following example.
On the other hand, iterating over the elements of a finite subgroup of a quasicyclic group terminates.
You can convert a finite quasicyclic subgroup to a permutation group, a finitely presented group, or to a Cayley table group.
As quasicyclic groups have no maximal subgroups, they are equal to their Frattini subgroups.
A multiplicative quasicyclic -group contains the group generated by the imaginary unit.
Quasicyclic groups for different primes are, of course, non-isomorphic.