A set of numbers usually refers to a group (set) of numbers with certain discreption or properties.
All odd numbers less than 10 is the set {1,3,5,7,9}
The set of numbers which solve the problem 3x^2 -7 = 68 is {5 and -5}
A set is simply a collection of things or concepts. You define what is in a set. The set of the first three things that I see on my desk now is an example of a set. If the element of the set are all numbers then it is a set of numbers.
A set of numbers is any collection of numbers. There need not be any discernible pattern.
Like A Pattern. 1 2 3 4 5...
set Ais a set of odd numbers less than 10
No, it is not.
Many infinite sets appear in mathematics: the set of counting numbers; the set of integers; the set of rational numbers; the set of irrational numbers; the set of real numbers; the set of complex numbers. Also, certain subsets of these, such as the set of square numbers, the set of prime numbers, and others.
real numbers
In a certain sense, the set of complex numbers is "larger" than the set of real numbers, since the set of real numbers is a proper subset of it.
the set of real numbers
All of the natural numbers.
The set of integers, the set of rational numbers, the set of real numbers, the set of complex numbers, ...
The set of numbers which 3 does not belong is the set of even numbers.
This set of numbers is called "Whole Numbers".
The set of real numbers.
Whole numbers are the set of natural or counting numbers inclding zero
If you mean larger by "the set of whole numbers strictly contains the set of natural numbers", then yes, but if you mean "the set of whole numbers has a larger cardinality (size) than the set of natural numbers", then no, they have the same size.