depending on geometry size,type of analysis carried out,computer configration,and your privious exeperiance
False. The collection of natural numbers is an example of a set, not an element. An element is an individual member of a set, while the collection of natural numbers is a set itself.
an empty set does not have any element
I believe you are talking about subsets. The empty set (set with no elements) is a subset of any set, including of the empty set. ("If an object is an element of set A, then it is also an element of set B." Since no element is an element of set A, the statement is vacuously true.)
No. An empty set is a subset of every set but it is not an element of every set.
element of a set is when two numbers are formed together to form a set and the element is based on a binary question or answer.
The empty element is a subset of any set--the empty set is even a subset of itself. But it is not an element of every set; in particular, the empty set cannot be an element of itself because the empty set has no elements.
No, but it is a subset of every set.It is an element of the power set of every set.
I will provide a name of an element from the set if you provide the set for me. Please specify the set you are referring to.
No.
An item in a set is called an element.An item in a set is called an element.
0, zero, is defined as the identity element for addition and subtraction. * * * * * While 0 is certainly the identity element with respect to addition, there is no identity element for subtraction. The identity element of a set, for a given operation, must commute with every element of the set. Since a - 0 ≠ 0 - a, according to group theory, 0 is not an identity with respect to subtraction.
A is a subset of the larger set. This means that every element in set A is also an element in the larger set.