It is a set which contains a finite number of elements.
A diagram that links elements of the domain and range.
This is called the complement of the set.
When two sets do not have any elements common between them,they are said to be disjoint.
It can be. It can rely on logic, and logic is related to math. In making arguments, they can use a lot of mathematical elements, like establishing numbers to prove the argument they are making.
It is a set which contains a finite number of elements.
Almost everything contains some elements of mathematics.
A diagram that links elements of the domain and range.
This is called the complement of the set.
Elements. Like oxygen and hydrogen and nitrogen, those are gases. Metals, like aluminum and iron. Metalloids, like sillicone and boron. Elements are the essential "elements"(WHAT!!!) of chemistry. There is also a ton of math (really it's all about math), and calculations about charges (positive or negative) and balancing equations and moles(unit of mass for substances). But mostly its all math.
It is a set that contains no elements - an empty set.
In general, elements are the smallest irreducible parts of anything. Elements in math and science are the most basic principles or rudiments of the subject to be learned.
Oh, dude, it's like a math party up in here! So, when you have set A with m elements and set B with n elements, the number of different elements in the Cartesian product A x B is m x n. It's like multiplying the number of options in each set to get the total possibilities. Math can be fun... sometimes.
they dont share common elements...thats why their disjoint..g??
When two sets do not have any elements common between them,they are said to be disjoint.
It can be. It can rely on logic, and logic is related to math. In making arguments, they can use a lot of mathematical elements, like establishing numbers to prove the argument they are making.
Two sets are disjoint if there are elements that belong to both. Two sets are overlapping if there is at least one elements that belongs to both.