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Lecture 6 2.1 Sets 2.2 Set Operations.

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Presentation on theme: "Lecture 6 2.1 Sets 2.2 Set Operations."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lecture 6 2.1 Sets 2.2 Set Operations

2 Definition of Set and Set Theory

3 Describing Set Membership

4 Set Builder Notation

5 Sets and Set Operations
Definition: A set is any collection of distinct things considered as a whole. A set is an unordered collection of objects. Discuss whether each of the following in a set: S = {1, 2, 3, 42} V = {x|x is a real number} T = {1, 1, 2, 3} W = {x|x is not in W} U = { } Z = {{1,2,3},{2,3,4},{3,4,5}} P = { { }, { { } }, { { { } } } } Q = {{1,2,3}, {2,3,4},{3,2,1}} Since the members of a set are in no particular order Q is not a set if its members are sets, but Q is a set if its members are 3-tuples, vectors or some other entity for which membership order is important. Since f = { } we can rewrite P = { f, {f}, {{f}} } so P is a set containing three elements, namely the empty set, a singleton containing the empty set and a singleton containing a singleton containing the empty set.

6 Definitions: Set Properties
If A is a set containing n elements then |A| = n, and is called the cardinality of A. Given a set S, the power set of S is the set of all subsets of the set S. The power set is S is denoted by P(S). The ordered n-tuple (a1, a2, , an) is the ordered collection that has a1 as its first element, a2 as its second element and an as its nth element. Let A and B be sets. The Cartesian product of A and B, denoted by AxB, is the set of all ordered pairs (a,b) where a A and b B. Hence, AxB = {(a,b)|a A b B}.

7 Cartesian Product B 2 4 5 1 1,2 1,4 1,5 A = { 1,3,5,8 } 3 3,2 3,4 3,5
, , ,5 , , ,5 , , ,5 , , ,5 A = { 1,3,5,8 } B = { 2,4,5 } A = { s, pass, link, stock } B = { word, port, age, able}

8 Definition: Venn Diagrams

9 Set Notation with Quantifiers
For all x, elements of the Reals, x2 is greater than or equal to 0. There exists an x, element of the Integers, such that x2 equals 1. For every x, element of the Reals, there exists a y, element of the Reals, such that x times y = 1. (give an exception to show this statement is false) For every x, element of the Integers, there exists ay, element of the Integers, such that x plus y = 0.

10 Truth Sets of Quantifiers

11 Combining Sets

12 Set Union

13 Set Intersection

14 Venn Diagrams A B U

15 Set Identities (This is why we had a separate test on first-order logic.)

16 Membership Table Show that 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 1

17 Computer Representation of Sets

18 Satisfiability Set Enumeration
An Example Satisfiability Set Enumeration =


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