That is called the intersection of the sets.
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.
a set that is empty; a set with no members.
There are various types of sets. A finite set has a limited number of members, such as the letters of the alphabet; an infinite set has an unlimited number of members, such as all whole numbers; an empty or null sethas no members, such as the number of people who have swum across the Atlantic Ocean, written as {} or ø; a single-element set has only one member, such as days of the week beginning with M, written as {Monday}. Equal sets have the same members; for example, if W = {days of the week} and S = {Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday}, it can be said that W = S. Sets with the same number of members are equivalent sets. Sets with some members in common are intersecting sets; for example, if R = {red playing cards} and F = {face cards}, then Rand Fshare the members that are red face cards. Sets with no members in common are disjoint sets. Sets contained within others aresubsets; for example, V = {vowels} is a subset of L = {letters of the alphabet}.Read more: Kinds_of_sets
-- The null set is a set with no members. -- So it has no members that are absent from any other set.
Joint sets are sets that have common element.
Kinds of sets are: infinite set-the set continues on for infinity.There may not be an infinite amount of a thing you wear, it is limited to numbers. finite set-it has finite (countable) number of elements, it has unlimited numbers. numerical set-a set having only numbers as its elements, set prime numbers (2,3,5,7,11,13,17..) equal set-two sets are equal if they have precisely the same numbers. null set-its is a set with no elements or numbers. equivalent set-sets with the same numbers of members . intersecting sets-sets with some members in common. subsets-sets contained within others are subset.
The union of two or more sets is a set containing all of the members in those sets. For example, the union of sets with members 1, 2, 3, and a set with members 3, 4, 5 is the set with members 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. So we can write:Let A = {1. 2. 3} and B = {3, 4, 5}, thenA∪B = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}The intersection of two or more sets is the set containing only the members contained in every set. For example, the intersection of a set with members 1, 2, 3, and a set with members 3, 4, 5 is the set with only member 3. So we can write:Let A = {1. 2. 3} and B = {3, 4, 5}, thenA ∩ B = {3}
is the result after doing intersection on 2 or more sets. It contains the elements which are common to all the sets on which intersection were done.
Sets are not disjants, they are disjoint. And two sets are disjoint if they have nothing in common. For example, the set {1,3,5} has nothing in common with the set {2,4,6}. So they are disjoint.
The least common multiple, or LCM, is the smallest number that all the members of a given set can divide into evenly with no remainder.
A relationship is a way of associating members of one set to members of another set (the two sets could be the same). The first of these sets is the domain and the second is the range.
Yes. Union is an operation in which all the members of any two sets are placed in a common set. The union operation can be applied to the null set and any set but since it has no members, it does not change the set the union is taken with. It is rather like adding 0 to a number.