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'''Fractal measure''' is
Although related, differing fractal measures are not the same, and may provide different measurements for the same shape.
==Hausdorff measure==
{{main|Hausdorff measure}}
The Hasudorff measure is the most-used fractal measure and provides a definition for [[Hausdorff dimension]], which is in turn one of the most frequently used definitions of fractal dimension.
Let <math>(X,\rho)</math> be a [[metric space]]. For any subset <math>U\subset X</math>, let <math>\mathrm{diam}\;U</math> denote its diameter, that is
:<math>\operatorname{diam} U :=\sup\{\rho(x,y):x,y\in U\}, \quad \operatorname{diam} \emptyset:=0</math>
Let <math>S</math> be any subset of <math>X,</math> and <math>\delta>0</math> a real number. The outer-Hausdorff measure of <math>S</math> is
:<math>H^d_\delta(S)=\inf\left \{\sum_{i=1}^\infty (\operatorname{diam} U_i)^d: \bigcup_{i=1}^\infty U_i\supseteq S, \operatorname{diam} U_i<\delta\right \},</math>
where the infimum is over all countable covers of <math>S</math> by sets <math>U_i\subset X</math> satisfying <math> \operatorname{diam} U_i<\delta</math>, and the Hausdorff measure <math>H^d(S)</math> is the limit of <math>H^d_\delta(S)</math> as <math>\delta</math> approaches zero.
When the ''d''-dimensional Hausdorff measure is an integer, <math>H^d(S)</math> is proportional to the [[Lebesgue measure]] for that dimension. Due to this, some definitions of Hausdorff measure include a scaling by the volume of the unit [[N-sphere|''d''-ball]], expressed using [[gamma function|Euler's gamma function]] as
:<math>\frac{\pi^{d/2}}{\Gamma(\frac{d}{2}+1)}.</math><ref>https://encyclopediaofmath.org/wiki/Hausdorff_measure</ref>
==Packing measure==
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