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Unit 3.1 Introduction To Sets

This document provides an introduction to sets. It discusses the history and basic definitions of sets, including elements, membership, notation, and examples of common sets like natural numbers, integers, rational numbers, and real numbers. It also covers set operations like unions, intersections, subsets, proper subsets, as well as the power set and Cartesian products of sets. Exercises are provided to help readers practice set concepts.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
53 views20 pages

Unit 3.1 Introduction To Sets

This document provides an introduction to sets. It discusses the history and basic definitions of sets, including elements, membership, notation, and examples of common sets like natural numbers, integers, rational numbers, and real numbers. It also covers set operations like unions, intersections, subsets, proper subsets, as well as the power set and Cartesian products of sets. Exercises are provided to help readers practice set concepts.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Unit 3

Introduction to SETS

Prepared by Jessica B. Canaman


Learning Objectives

 Discuss basic properties of sets


 Describe the set builder notation and Rooster
Method
 Perform operations on mathematical expression
correctly
 Acknowledge that mathematics is a useful
language

Prepared by Jessica B. Canaman


SET
 History
 Georg Cantor (1845-1918) introduced the word set in 1879
 Definition
Set – collection of well defined and distinct objects
called elements

 - used to denote membership of object in the set


- used to enclose the elements of the set
Upper case letters A, B, C, …– used to name a set
Lower case letter a,b,c,…– sometimes used as
elements of the set
Prepared by Jessica B. Canaman
Example
The set A is a set of natural numbers less than 100.
Set-builder form

A  xform
Roster / x is a natural number, x  100

A  1,2,3,...,99
3 A
50  A
101 A
Prepared by Jessica B. Canaman
Sets of Numbers
Set of natural numbers

Set of integers

Set of rational numbers

Set of real numbers

N  1,2,3,...

Z  ...,3,2,1,0,1,2,3,...
 p 
Q   x / x  where p, q  Z , q  0
 q 

R  x / x is either rational or irrational 

Prepared by Jessica B. Canaman


Using the Set-Builder Notation
Let R denotes the set of all real numbers.
Describe the following set:
xR / -5 < x < 1
Read: “x is an element of the set of real
numbers such that negative five is less than x
and x is less than 1”

Prepared by Jessica B. Canaman


Using the Set-Builder Notation
Let Z denotes the set of all integers
Describe the following set:
xZ / -5 < x < 1

List the elements of the set:


-4, -3, -2, -1, 0

Prepared by Jessica B. Canaman


Using the Set-Builder Notation

Let be the set of negative


integers

List the elements of the set


x / -5 < x < 1
-4, -3, -2, -1

Prepared by Jessica B. Canaman


Subset of a Set
 The set A is a subset of set B (AB), if and
only if, every element of A is in B.
 Let M = g,r,e,a,t
Tell if each of the following sets is a subset of
the set M
a. a,t
b. e,a,t
c. t,e,a,m
d. r,g,e,t,a
Prepared by Jessica B. Canaman
Proper Subset of a Set
A is a proper subset of B (AB), if and only
if, every element of A is in B but there is at
least one element of B that is not in A.
Let A =1,4,3
B =1,2,3,4,5
C =2,3,1,4,5
Is AB?
Is CB?
Is BC?
Prepared by Jessica B. Canaman
Let A = B = nZ  0n10
C =10, 20,30,40,50
Tell if each of the following is TRUE or
FALSE. If FALSE, explain why?
a. BA
b. C is a proper subset of A
c. C and B have at least one element in
common
d. C B
e. C C
Prepared by Jessica B. Canaman
Number of Subsets of a Set
Let S = a,i,r
Subsets of S:  or 
r
a
i
a,i
i,r
a,r
i,a,r
How many subsets does a set with any element have?
Prepared by Jessica B. Canaman
Number of Subsets of a Given Set
 How many subsets does a set have if it has
no element?
1 element?
2 elements
3 elements?
4 elements
10 elements?
50 elements?
n elements? Formula: 2^n ( 2 to the power of n)
Remark. The cardinal number of a sets refers to the number
of elements of a set. n(A)= no of elements of set A
Power of a Set
 Set whose elements are its subsets
Let S = a,i,r
 Let P(S) denotes the power of a set S
P( S )    , a
, r
, i , a, i
, a, r
, i, r
, i, r , a 
Based on S and P(S) tell whether each of the following
is TRUE or FALSE
 a  P (S ) a P(S )
a P(S ) a, r P( S )
How many elements does P(S) have?
Check Your Progress

Given sets A, B, and C. Tell whether each of the following


is TRUE or FALSE. If false, explain why?

A= B= C  2
a. 2C b. 2A
c. 2B d. C  A
e. AB f. BA

g. A and B are equal sets

Prepared by Jessica B. Canaman


Cartesian Product
 Definition
Given sets A and B. The Cartesian product of A
and B, denoted AxB and read “A cross B” is the
set of all ordered pairs (a,b), where a is in A and
b is in B.
Symbolically,
AxB= (a,b) aA and bB

Prepared by Jessica B. Canaman


Example
 Let A = 1,3,-4 and B =0,3
Find a) AxB b) BxA
Solution
AxB =(1,0),(1,3),(3,0),(3,3),(-4,0),(-4,3)
BxA = (0,1),(0,3),(0,-4),(3,1),(3,3),(3,-4)
 Plot on the coordinate plane the points
(1,3) and (3,1)
 Are ordered pairs (1,3) and (3,1) the same?
Prepared by Jessica B. Canaman
Check Your Progress
Let A = -1, 0, 1 and B =0, 1, 2
Refer to the given sets. Tell whether or not each of
the following statements is true.
1. n(AxB) = 6
2. (0,0) AxB
3. (1, -1)  AxB
4. (1, -1)  BxA
5. (0, 2) AxB
6. (0,1), (1, 2)AxB
Chapter 3.1 Exercises
Tell whether each of the following is true or
false. If false explain why.
x  x, y, z x  x, y, z
1.
x 4 x, y , z
2. x x, y, z
x5 x, y, z
3.
y x, y
, z
6.

Prepared by Jessica B. Canaman


end

Prepared by Jessica B. Canaman

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