The term finitely many-valued logic is typically used to describe many-valued logic having three or more, but not infinite, truth values. The term finite-valued logic encompasses both finitely many-valued logic and bivalent logic.[3][4]Fuzzy logics, which allow for degrees of values between "true" and "false", are typically not considered forms of finite-valued logic.[5] However, finite-valued logic can be applied in Boolean-valued modeling,[6][7]description logics,[8] and defuzzification[9][10] of fuzzy logic. A finite-valued logic is decidable (sure to determine outcomes of the logic when it is applied to propositions) if and only if it has a computational semantics.[11]
^"1.4.4 Defuzzification"(PDF). Fuzzy Logic. Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich. 2014. p. 4. Archived from the original(PDF) on 2009-07-09. Retrieved 2018-05-16.