Intersection: Difference between revisions
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imported>Richard Pinch (→References: pages) |
imported>Richard Pinch (definition of disjoint sets) |
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:<math> A \cap B = \{ x : x \in A \wedge x \in B \} , \, </math> | :<math> A \cap B = \{ x : x \in A \wedge x \in B \} , \, </math> | ||
where <math>\wedge</math> denotes logical and. | where <math>\wedge</math> denotes [[logical and]]. Two sets are '''disjoint''' if their intersection is the [[empty set]]. | ||
==Properties== | ==Properties== |
Revision as of 14:52, 14 November 2008
In set theory, the intersection of two sets is the set of elements that they have in common:
where denotes logical and. Two sets are disjoint if their intersection is the empty set.
Properties
The intersection operation is:
- associative : ;
- commutative : .
General intersections
Finite intersections
The intersection of any finite number of sets may be defined inductively, as
Infinite intersections
The intersection of a general family of sets Xλ as λ ranges over a general index set Λ may be written in similar notation as
We may drop the indexing notation and define the intersection of a set to be the set of elements contained in all the elements of that set:
In this notation the intersection of two sets A and B may be expressed as
The correct definition of the intersection of the empty set needs careful consideration.
See also
References
- Paul Halmos (1960). Naive set theory. Van Nostrand Reinhold. Section 4.
- Keith J. Devlin (1979). Fundamentals of Contemporary Set Theory. Springer-Verlag, 6,11. ISBN 0-387-90441-7.