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Chapter 3 Set Theory Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.1 Sets and Subsets A well-defined collection of objects (the set of outstanding people, outstanding is very subjective) finite sets, infinite sets, cardinality of a set, subset A={1,3,5,7,9} 1 A,1 B ,1 C B={x|x is odd} C={1,3,5,7,9,...} cardinality of A=5 (|A|=5) A is a proper subset of B. A B CB C is a subset of B. Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.1 Sets and Subsets Russell's Paradox S {A| A is a set and A A} ( a) Show that is S S , then S S . ( b) Show that is S S , then S S Principia Mathematica by Russel and Whitehead Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.1 Sets and Subsets subsets A B x[ x A x B ] A B x[ x A x B ] x[ ( x A) x B )] x[ x A x B ] set equality C D ( C D) ( D C ) C D (C D D C ) C D D C Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.1 Sets and Subsets null set or empty set : {}, universal set, universe: U power set of A: the set of all subsets of A A={1,2}, P(A)={, {1}, {2}, {1,2}} If |A|=n, then |P(A)|=2n. Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.1 Sets and Subsets If |A|=n, then |P(A)|=2n. For any finite set A with |A|=n0, there are C(n,k) subsets of size k. Counting the subsets of A according to the number, k, of elements in a subset, we have the combinatorial identity n n n n 2 n , for n 0 0 1 2 n Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.1 Sets and Subsets Ex. 3.9 Number of nonreturn-Manhattan paths between two points with integer coordinated From (2,1) to (7,4): 3 Ups, 5 Rights R,U,R,R,U,R,R,U 8!/(5!3!)=56 permutation 8 steps, select 3 steps to be Up {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8}, a 3 element subset represents a way, for example, {1,3,7} means steps 1, 3, and 7 are up. the number of 3 element subsets=C(8,3)=8!/(5!3!)=56 Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.1 Sets and Subsets Ex. 3.10 The number of compositions of an positive integer 4=3+1=1+3=2+2=2+1+1=1+2+1=1+1+2=1+1+1+1 4 has 8 compositions. (4 has 5 partitions.) Now, we use the idea of subset to solve this problem. Consider 4=1+1+1+1 The uses or not-uses of 1st plus 2nd plus 3rd plus these signs determine sign sign sign compositions. compositions=The number of subsets of {1,2,3}=8 Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.1 Sets and Subsets Ex. 3.11 For integer n, r with n r 1 prove n 1 n n r r r 1 Let A {x , a1 , a2 , , an } combinatorially. Consider all subsets of A that contain r elements. n 1 n n r r r 1 those include r all possibilities those exclude r Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.1 Sets and Subsets Ex. 3.13 The Pascal's Triangle binomial coefficients 4 0 3 0 2 0 4 1 1 0 3 1 0 0 2 1 4 2 1 1 3 2 2 2 4 3 3 3 4 4 Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.1 Sets and Subsets common notations (a) Z=the set of integers={0,1,-1,2,-1,3,-3,...} (b) N=the set of nonnegative integers or natural numbers (c) Z+=the set of positive integers (d) Q=the set of rational numbers={a/b| a,b is integer, b not zero} (e) Q+=the set of positive rational numbers (f) Q*=the set of nonzero rational numbers (g) R=the set of real numbers (h) R+=the set of positive real numbers (i) R*=the set of nonzero real numbers (j) C=the set of complex numbers Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.1 Sets and Subsets common notations (k) C*=the set of nonzero complex numbers (l) For any n in Z+, Zn={0,1,2,3,...,n-1} (m) For real numbers a,b with a<b, [ a, b] {x R | a x b} closed interval (a, b) {x R | a x b} open interval [a, b) {x R | a x b} (a, b] {x R | a x b} half-open interval Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.2 Set Operations and the Laws of Set Theory Def. 3.5 For A,B U union a) A B {x | x A x B} intersection b) A B {x | x A x B} c) AB {x | x A B x A B} symmetric difference Def.3.6 mutually disjoint A B A U A {x | x U x A} Def 3.7 complement Def 3.8 relative complement of A in B B A {x | x B x A} Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.2 Set Operations and the Laws of Set Theory Theorem 3.4 For any universe U and any set A,B in U, the following statements are equivalent: a) A B b) A B B reasoning process c) A B A (a) (b), (b) (c), d) B A (c) (d), and (d) (a) Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.2 Set Operations and the Laws of Set Theory The Laws of Set Theory (1) A A Law of Double Complement (2) A B A B Demorgan ' s Laws A B A B (3) A B B A Commutative Laws A B B A (4) A ( B C ) ( A B ) C Associative Laws A ( B C ) ( A B) C (5) A ( B C ) ( A B ) ( A C ) Distributi ve Laws A ( B C ) ( A B) ( A C ) Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.2 Set Operations and the Laws of Set Theory The Laws of Set Theory (6) A A A, A A A Idempotent Laws (7) A A, A U A Identity Laws (8) A A U , A A (9) A U U , A = Inverse Laws Domination Laws (10) A ( A B ) A A( A B ) A Absorption Laws Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.2 Set Operations and the Laws of Set Theory s dual of s (sd) U U Theorem 3.5 (The Principle of Duality) Let s denote a theorem dealing with the equality of two set expressions. Then sd is also a theorem. Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.2 Set Operations and the Laws of Set Theory Ex. 3.17 What is the dual of A B? Since A B A B B . The dual of A B is the dual of A B B , which is A B B . That is, B A. A B Venn diagram U A A A B Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.2 Set Operations and the Laws of Set Theory Ex. 3.19. Negate A B . A B {x | x A x B} A B A B A B A B Ex. 3.20 Negate AB . AB {x | x A B x A B} ( A B) ( A B) ( A B) ( A B) AB ( A B ) ( A B ) A B ( A B ) ( A B ) ( A B ) [( A B ) A] [( A B ) B ] ( B A) ( A B ) ( A B ) ( A B ) AB A B Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.2 Set Operations and the Laws of Set Theory Def 3.10. Ai {x | x Ai for at least one i I }, and iI Ai {x | x Ai for every i I } iI I: index set Theorem 3.6 Generalized DeMorgan's Laws Ai Ai iI iI Ai Ai iI iI Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.3 Counting and Venn Diagrams Ex. 3.23. In a class of 50 college freshmen, 30 are studying BASIC, 25 studying PASCAL, and 10 are studying both. How many freshmen are studying either computer language? U 5 A B | A B | | A| | B | | A B | 20 10 15 Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.3 Counting and Venn Diagrams Ex 3.24. Defect types of an AND gate: D1: first input stuck at 0 11 D2: second input stuck at 0 D3: output stuck at 1 A 4 5 12 3 7 15 B 43 C Given 100 samples set A: with D1 | A B C | | A| | B | | C | | A B | set B: with D2 | A C | | B C | | A B C | set C: with D3 with |A|=23, |B|=26, |C|=30, | A B | 7, | A C | 8, | B C | 10, | A B C | 3 , how many samples have defects? Ans:57 Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.3 Counting and Venn Diagrams Ex 3.25 There are 3 games. In how many ways can one play one game each day so that one can play each of the three at least once during 5 days? set A: without playing game 1 set B: without playing game 2 balls containers set C: without playing game 3 1 | A| | B | | C | 2 5 g1 2 5 g2 | A B | | B C | | C A| 1 3 | A B C| 0 g3 4 5 5 | A B C | 3 2 3 1 0 93 5 5 Ans 3 93 150 Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.4 A Word on Probability event A a elementary event U=sample space Pr(A)=the probability that A occurs=|A|/|U| Pr(a)=|{a}|/|U|=1/|U| Chapter 3 Set Theory 3.4 A Word on Probability Ex. 3.27 If one tosses a coin four times, what is the probability of getting two heads and two tails? Ans: sample space size=24=16 event: H,H,T,T in any order, 4!/(2!2!)=6 Consequently, Pr(A)=6/16=3/8 Each toss is independent of the outcome of any previous toss. Such an occurrence is called a Bernoulli trial.