Well, honey, a set with "n" elements has 2 to the power of "n" subsets. So, if you've got a set with 5 elements, you're looking at 2 to the power of 5, which is 32 subsets. Math doesn't have to be boring, darling!
512 subsets
A set with ( n ) elements has ( 2^n ) subsets. This includes all possible combinations of the elements, including the empty set and the set itself. The reasoning behind this is that for each element, you can either include it in a subset or not, leading to ( 2 ) choices per element. Therefore, for ( n ) elements, the total number of subsets is ( 2^n ).
There are 2100 = 1.268*1030 or 1,268 octllion subsets with an odd number of elements.
A set with 50 elements has 250 subsets.
An element doesn't have subsets. Sets can have subsets.
6
In a subset each element of the original may or may not appear - a choice of 2 for each element; thus for 3 elements there are 2 × 2 × 2 = 2³ = 8 possible subsets.
Well, honey, a set with "n" elements has 2 to the power of "n" subsets. So, if you've got a set with 5 elements, you're looking at 2 to the power of 5, which is 32 subsets. Math doesn't have to be boring, darling!
512 subsets
8 subsets
A set with 9 elements has 2^9 = 512 subsets.
64. You can use Pascal's triangle to figure out how many subsets have no elements, one element, two elements and so on. For this particular one, you will have 6 subsets with one element, 15 with two, 20 with three, 15 with four, 6 with five and only one each of all six and none at all.
A set with ( n ) elements has ( 2^n ) subsets. This includes all possible combinations of the elements, including the empty set and the set itself. The reasoning behind this is that for each element, you can either include it in a subset or not, leading to ( 2 ) choices per element. Therefore, for ( n ) elements, the total number of subsets is ( 2^n ).
There are 2100 = 1.268*1030 or 1,268 octllion subsets with an odd number of elements.
A set with 50 elements has 250 subsets.
7.