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Sets - Grade 10

The document provides an introduction to sets, defining a set as a collection of objects and outlining key properties such as order and duplicates. It explains how to specify sets using various notations, discusses universal sets, Venn diagrams, and the concept of subsets and proper subsets. Additionally, it covers set operations including union, intersection, and complement, along with their properties.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
18 views36 pages

Sets - Grade 10

The document provides an introduction to sets, defining a set as a collection of objects and outlining key properties such as order and duplicates. It explains how to specify sets using various notations, discusses universal sets, Venn diagrams, and the concept of subsets and proper subsets. Additionally, it covers set operations including union, intersection, and complement, along with their properties.
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

Introduction to Sets

Grade 10

1
What is a set?
• A set is a group of “objects”
– People in a class: { Alice, Bob, Chris }
– Classes offered by a department: { CS 101, CS 202, … }
– Colors of a rainbow: { red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple }
– States of matter { solid, liquid, gas, plasma }
– States in the US: { Alabama, Alaska, Virginia, … }
– Sets can contain non-related elements: { 3, a, red, Virginia }

• Although a set can contain (almost) anything, we will most


often use sets of numbers
– All positive numbers less than or equal to 5: {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
– A few selected real numbers: { 2.1, π, 0, -6.32, e }

2
Set properties 1
• Order does not matter
– We often write them in order because it is
easier for humans to understand it that way
– {1, 2, 3, 4, 5} is equivalent to {3, 5, 2, 4, 1}

• Sets are notated with curly brackets

3
Set properties 2
• Sets do not have duplicate elements
– Consider the set of vowels in the alphabet.
• It makes no sense to list them as {a, a, a, e, i, o, o,
o, o, o, u}
• What we really want is just {a, e, i, o, u}
– Consider the list of students in this class
• Again, it does not make sense to list somebody
twice
• Note that a list is like a set, but order does
matter and duplicate elements are allowed
– We won’t be studying lists much in this class
4
Specifying a set 1
• Sets are usually represented by a capital
letter (A, B, S, etc.)

• Elements are usually represented by an


italic lower-case letter (a, x, y, etc.)

• Easiest way to specify a set is to list all the


elements: A = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
– Not always feasible for large or infinite sets
5
Specifying a set 2
• Can use an ellipsis (…): B = {0, 1, 2, 3, …}
– Can cause confusion. Consider the set C = {3, 5, 7,
…}. What comes next?
– If the set is all odd integers greater than 2, it is 9
– If the set is all prime numbers greater than 2, it is 11

• Can use set-builder notation


– D = {x | x is prime and x > 2}
– E = {x | x is odd and x > 2}
– The vertical bar means “such that”
– Thus, set D is read (in English) as: “all elements x
such that x is prime and x is greater than 2”
• Can use roster notation
• D = {3,5,7,11,13…}
• E = {3,5,7,9,11…} 6
Specifying a set 3
• A set is said to “contain” the various
“members” or “elements” that make up the
set
– If an element a is a member of (or an element
of) a set S, we use then notation a  S
• 4  {1, 2, 3, 4}
– If an element is not a member of (or an
element of) a set S, we use the notation a  S
• 7  {1, 2, 3, 4}
• Virginia  {1, 2, 3, 4}
7
Often used sets
• N = {0, 1, 2, 3, …} is the set of natural numbers
• Z = {…, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, …} is the set of integers
• Z+ = {1, 2, 3, …} is the set of positive integers
(a.k.a whole numbers)
• Q = {p/q | p  Z, q  Z, q ≠ 0} is the set of
rational numbers
– Any number that can be expressed as a fraction of
two integers (where the bottom one is not zero)
• R is the set of real numbers

8
The universal set 1
• U is the universal set – the set of all of
elements (or the “universe”) from which
given any set is drawn
– For the set {-2, 0.4, 2}, U would be the real
numbers
– For the set {0, 1, 2}, U could be the natural
numbers (zero and up), the integers, the
rational numbers, or the real numbers,
depending on the context

9
The universal set 2
– For the set of the students in this class, U
would be all the students in the University (or
perhaps all the people in the world)

– For the set of the vowels of the alphabet, U


would be all the letters of the alphabet

– To differentiate U from U (which is a set


operation), the universal set is written in a
different font (and in bold and italics)

10
Venn diagrams
• Represents sets graphically
– The box represents the universal set
– Circles represent the set(s)
• Consider set S, which is
b c d f
the set of all vowels in the U
g h j
alphabet S
k l m
n p q a e i

r s t
o u
v w x
y z

11
Sets of sets
• Sets can contain other sets
– S = { {1}, {2}, {3} }
– T = { {1}, {{2}}, {{{3}}} }
– V = { {{1}, {{2}}}, {{{3}}}, { {1}, {{2}}, {{{3}}} } }
• Note that 1 ≠ {1} ≠ {{1}} ≠ {{{1}}}
– They are all different

12
The empty set 1
• If a set has zero elements, it is called the
empty (or null) set
– Written using the symbol 
– Thus,  = { }  VERY IMPORTANT
– If you get confused about the empty set in a
problem, try replacing  by { }
• As the empty set is a set, it can be a
element of other sets
– { , 1, 2, 3, x } is a valid set
13
The empty set 1
• Note that  ≠ {  }
– The first is a set of zero elements
– The second is a set of 1 element (that one
element being the empty set)

• Replace  by { }, and you get: { } ≠ { { } }


• It’s easier to see that they are not equal that way

14
Set equality
• Two sets are equal if they have the same
elements
– {1, 2, 3, 4, 5} = {5, 4, 3, 2, 1}
• Remember that order does not matter!
– {1, 2, 3, 2, 4, 3, 2, 1} = {4, 3, 2, 1}
• Remember that duplicate elements do not matter!
• Two sets are not equal if they do not have
the same elements
– {1, 2, 3, 4, 5} ≠ {1, 2, 3, 4}
15
Subsets 1
• If all the elements of a set S are also elements of
a set T, then S is a subset of T
– For example, if S = {2, 4, 6} and T = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,
7}, then S is a subset of T
– This is specified by S  T
• Or by {2, 4, 6}  {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7}
• If S is not a subset of T, it is written as such:
ST
– For example, {1, 2, 8}  {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7}

16
Subsets 2
• Note that any set is a subset of itself!
– Given set S = {2, 4, 6}, since all the elements
of S are elements of S, S is a subset of itself
– This is kind of like saying 5 is less than or
equal to 5
– Thus, for any set S, S  S

17
Subsets 3
• The empty set is a subset of all sets (including
itself!)
– Recall that all sets are subsets of themselves
• All sets are subsets of the universal set

18
Proper Subsets 1
• If S is a subset of T, and S is not equal to
T, then S is a proper subset of T
– Let T = {0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
– If S = {1, 2, 3}, S is not equal to T, and S is a
subset of T
– A proper subset is written as S  T
– Let R = {0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5}. R is equal to T, and
thus is a subset (but not a proper subset) or T
• Can be written as: R  T and R  T (or just R = T)
– Let Q = {4, 5, 6}. Q is neither a subset or T
nor a proper subset of T
19
Proper Subsets 2
• The difference between “subset” and
“proper subset” is like the difference
between “less than or equal to” and “less
than” for numbers

• The empty set is a proper subset of all


sets other than the empty set (as it is
equal to the empty set)

20
Proper subsets: Venn diagram
SR
U
R

21
Set cardinality
• The cardinality of a set is the number of
elements in a set
– Written as |A| or Card(A)
• Examples
– Let R = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}. Then |R| = 5
– || = 0
– Let S = {, {a}, {b}, {a, b}}. Then |S| = 4
• A set with one element is called a singleton set
• A set with two elements is called a pair

22
Power sets 1
• Given the set S = {0, 1}. What are all the
possible subsets of S?
– They are:  (as it is a subset of all sets), {0},
{1}, and {0, 1}
– The power set of S (written as P(S)) is the set
of all the subsets of S
– P(S) = { , {0}, {1}, {0,1} }
• Note that |S| = 2 and |P(S)| = 4

23
Power sets 2
• Let T = {0, 1, 2}. The P(T) = { , {0}, {1},
{2}, {0,1}, {0,2}, {1,2}, {0,1,2} }
• Note that |T| = 3 and |P(T)| = 8
• P() = {  }
• Note that || = 0 and |P()| = 1
• If a set has n elements, then the power set
will have 2n elements

24
Set Operations

25
Set operations: Union 1
AUB
U

A B

26
Set operations: Union 2
• Formal definition for the union of two sets:
A U B = { x | x  A or x  B }
• Further examples
– {1, 2, 3} U {3, 4, 5} = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
– {New York, Washington} U {3, 4} = {New York,
Washington, 3, 4}
– {1, 2} U  = {1, 2}

27
Set operations: Union 3
• Properties of the union operation
–AU=A Identity law
–AUU=U Domination law
–AUA=A Idempotent law
–AUB=BUA Commutative law
– A U (B U C) = (A U B) U C Associative law

28
Set operations: Intersection 1
A∩B
U

A B

29
Set operations: Intersection 2
• Formal definition for the intersection of two
sets: A ∩ B = { x | x  A and x  B }
• Further examples
– {1, 2, 3} ∩ {3, 4, 5} = {3}
– {New York, Washington} ∩ {3, 4} = 
• No elements in common
– {1, 2} ∩  = 
• Any set intersection with the empty set yields the
empty set

30
Set operations: Intersection 3
• Properties of the intersection operation
–A∩U=A Identity law
–A∩= Domination law
–A∩A=A Idempotent law
–A∩B=B∩A Commutative law
– A ∩ (B ∩ C) = (A ∩ B) ∩ C Associative law

31
Disjoint sets 1

A B

32
Disjoint sets 2
• Formal definition for disjoint sets: two sets
are disjoint if their intersection is the empty
set
• Further examples
– {1, 2, 3} and {3, 4, 5} are not disjoint
– {New York, Washington} and {3, 4} are disjoint
– {1, 2} and  are disjoint
• Their intersection is the empty set
–  and  are disjoint!
• Their intersection is the empty set
33
Complement sets 1
_
A
B
U

A B

34
Complement sets 2
• Formal definition for the complement of a
set: A = { x | x  A }
– Or U – A, where U is the universal set
• Further examples (assuming U = Z)
– {1, 2, 3} = { …, -2, -1, 0, 4, 5, 6, … }

35
Complement sets 3
• Properties of complement sets

¯
–A¯ =A Complementation law
– A U A¯ = U Complement law
– A ∩ A¯ =  Complement law

36

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