they are not the same elements.
The complement of a set refers to the elements that are not included in that set but are part of a larger universal set. For example, if the universal set is all natural numbers and set A consists of even numbers, the complement of set A would be all the odd numbers within the universal set. Mathematically, the complement of set A is often denoted as A'.
The complement of a set S, relative to the universal set U, consists of all elements of U that are not in S.
The answer depends on what the set UR is!
Yes.
This is called the complement of the set.
The complement of an empty set is universal set
yes
false, because the complement of a set is the set of all elements that are not in the set.
The complement of a set refers to the elements that are not included in that set but are part of a larger universal set. For example, if the universal set is all natural numbers and set A consists of even numbers, the complement of set A would be all the odd numbers within the universal set. Mathematically, the complement of set A is often denoted as A'.
An absolute complement is the set which includes exactly the elements belonging to the universal set but not to a given set.
The complement of a set S, relative to the universal set U, consists of all elements of U that are not in S.
what is the verb complement
The answer depends on what the set UR is!
The complement of a subset B within a set A consists of all elements of A which are not in B.
Yes.
The shortened word meaning complementary is "complement."
This is called the complement of the set.