a comma
These two sets together make up the set of real numbers.
There is no such symbol for joint sets. Actually, there is a representation for joint sets. That is: The sets are joint if A ∩ B is not empty. The sets are disjoint if A ∩ B is empty.
Together, the two sets comprise the set of real numbers.
If I'm not wrong, sets of numbers are groups of numbers, pairs of numbers, but meant to be together in a certain order, way. When you say, take a set of numbers, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10... You took a group of numbers that are all even numbers. I guess its that, but Im not sure. Hope I helped in some way :)
The union is all the numbers in all the sets.
The sets of natural numbers, even numbers, odd numbers, prime numbers, rational numbers, irrational numbers, algebraic numbers, trascendental numbers, complex numbers, the sets of points in an euclidean space, etc.The sets of natural numbers, even numbers, odd numbers, prime numbers, rational numbers, irrational numbers, algebraic numbers, trascendental numbers, complex numbers, the sets of points in an euclidean space, etc.The sets of natural numbers, even numbers, odd numbers, prime numbers, rational numbers, irrational numbers, algebraic numbers, trascendental numbers, complex numbers, the sets of points in an euclidean space, etc.The sets of natural numbers, even numbers, odd numbers, prime numbers, rational numbers, irrational numbers, algebraic numbers, trascendental numbers, complex numbers, the sets of points in an euclidean space, etc.
there are 5 diffeerent sets Natural Numbers whole numbers integers rational numbers irrational numbers.
the answer is -1
sets
A null set. Although they could be sets of letters, sets of people, sets of animals, in fact sets of anything other than numbers.
The complex numbers.
Those are not sets of numbers. They're just numbers. And they're equal.