Closed sets and open sets, or finite and infinite sets.
No. It can be infinite, finite or null. The set of odd integers is infinite, the set of even integers is infinite. Their intersection is void, or the null set.
There are finite sets, countably infinite sets and uncountably infinite sets.
stars in the sky that's the some example of infinite sets
If you mean "the last number", there is no such thing; you can always add one more. Even infinite numbers - numbers that describe the magnitude of infinite sets - don't have a "last number"; you can always find a larger infinite number. Specifically, if you have a certain infinite number, 2 to the power of that infinite number will give you a larger infinity.
Closed sets and open sets, or finite and infinite sets.
Closed sets and open sets, or finite and infinite sets.
Closed sets and open sets, or finite and infinite sets.
Finite, countably infinite and uncountably infinite.
we can consider all infinite sets as equivlent sets if we go by the the cantor set theory.for eg. on a number line if we consider the nos. between 0 and 1 as a set then they are infinite. similarly the nos. between 0 and 5 can also be considered infinite and if considered as a set then they can be considered as equivalent
The way I understand it, a finite set can not be an infinite set, because if it were an infinite set, then it would not be a finite set, and the original premise would be violated.
True.