The difference of two sets A and B , to be denoted by A-B, is the set of all those elements which belong to A but not to B
The difference between joint sets and disjoint sets is the number of elements in common. A disjoint set, in math, does not any elements in common. A joint set must have at least one number in common.
Given two sets of observations - on the same or different elements - each set will give a mean value. The difference between these is the difference if two means. To be useful, the observations are usually of the same characteristic and are taken for two subsets of the population.For example men's heights and women's heights.
A repetition is how many you do in a set like 10 reps. A set is like how many sets of a repetition did you do.
Unless in mint or proof sets, only face value. They are all incredibly common and unless in a set they are only worth 25 cents. Each state quarter is worth face value, 25 cents each. There is no difference in value between these and regular quarters. If you mean an entire set of state quarters, there are 50 states, so fifty states times 25 cents each mean that an entire 50-quarter set is worth $12.50.
You normally do not have an intersection of only one set. The intersection of a set with itself is the set itself - a statement that adds little value. The intersection of two sets is the set which contains elements that are in each of the two sets.
Rogers never issued siverware sets in silver. Once in a while you might find a set in silver plate, but no silver sets. The value is whatever you might get for it.
union of setsintersection of setsdifference of setscomplement of setordered pair, ordered n-tupleequality of ordered n-tuplesCartesian product of sets* * * * *The complement of a set is the difference between that set and the Universal set. So the complement is only a special case of a difference.
I presume you mean intersecting. Two sets are intersecting if they have members in common. The set of members common to two (or more) sets is called the intersection of those sets. If two sets have no members in common, their intersection is the empty set. In this case the sets are called disjoint.
Before the sun sets
About ~20 cents over face value as a set. They contain no silver and uncirculated sets (Even more so than proof sets!) have very little collector demand at the moment. So you should add up the face value of all the coins in the set then add 20 cents to that and that is about the value of the set (assuming it is in mint packaging).
the range of a set of numbers is the difference between the highest value and the lowest value