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Sets and Set Operations: CS 441 Discrete Mathematics For CS

1) The document discusses basic concepts of sets and set operations covered in the CS 441 Discrete Mathematics course. 2) Key concepts include defining sets, representing sets, important sets in discrete math like natural and integer numbers, and set operations like union, intersection, difference and Cartesian product. 3) Examples are provided to illustrate set concepts like subsets, power sets, cardinality of sets and set operations.

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FarhanAhmed
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
82 views

Sets and Set Operations: CS 441 Discrete Mathematics For CS

1) The document discusses basic concepts of sets and set operations covered in the CS 441 Discrete Mathematics course. 2) Key concepts include defining sets, representing sets, important sets in discrete math like natural and integer numbers, and set operations like union, intersection, difference and Cartesian product. 3) Examples are provided to illustrate set concepts like subsets, power sets, cardinality of sets and set operations.

Uploaded by

FarhanAhmed
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CS 441 Discrete Mathematics for CS

Lecture 7

Sets and set operations

Milos Hauskrecht
[email protected]
5329 Sennott Square

CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Basic discrete structures


Discrete math =
study of the discrete structures used to represent discrete
objects
Many discrete structures are built using sets
Sets = collection of objects
Examples of discrete structures built with the help of sets:
Combinations
Relations
Graphs

CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Set
Definition: A set is a (unordered) collection of objects. These
objects are sometimes called elements or members of the set.
(Cantor's naive definition)
Examples:
Vowels in the English alphabet
V = { a, e, i, o, u }
First seven prime numbers.
X = { 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17 }

CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Representing sets
Representing a set by:
1) Listing (enumerating) the members of the set.
2) Definition by property, using the set builder notation
{x| x has property P}.
Example:
Even integers between 50 and 63.
1) E = {50, 52, 54, 56, 58, 60, 62}
2) E = {x| 50 <= x < 63, x is an even integer}
If enumeration of the members is hard we often use ellipses.
Example: a set of integers between 1 and 100
A= {1,2,3 , 100}
CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Important sets in discrete math


Natural numbers:
N = {0,1,2,3, }
Integers
Z = {, -2,-1,0,1,2, }
Positive integers
Z+ = {1,2, 3.}
Rational numbers
Q = {p/q | p Z, q Z, q 0}
Real numbers
R
CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Russells paradox
Cantor's naive definition of sets leads to Russell's paradox:
Let S = { x | x x },
is a set of sets that are not members of themselves.
Question: Where does the set S belong to?
Is S S or S S?
Cases
S S ?: S does not satisfy the condition so it must hold that
S S (or S S does not hold)
S S ?: S is included in the set S and hence S S does not
hold
A paradox: we cannot decide if S belongs to S or not
Russells answer: theory of types used for sets of sets
CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Equality
Definition: Two sets are equal if and only if they have the same
elements.
Example:
{1,2,3} = {3,1,2} = {1,2,1,3,2}
Note: Duplicates don't contribute anything new to a set, so remove
them. The order of the elements in a set doesn't contribute
anything new.
Example: Are {1,2,3,4} and {1,2,2,4} equal?
No!
CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Special sets
Special sets:
The universal set is denoted by U: the set of all objects
under the consideration.
The empty set is denoted as or { }.

CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Venn diagrams
A set can be visualized using Venn Diagrams:
V={ A, B, C }

U
A
B
C

M. Hauskrecht

CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

A Subset
Definition: A set A is said to be a subset of B if and only if
every element of A is also an element of B. We use A B to
indicate A is a subset of B.
U
B
A

Alternate way to define A is a subset of B:


x (x A) (x B)
CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Empty set/Subset properties


Theorem S
Empty set is a subset of any set.
Proof:
Recall the definition of a subset: all elements of a set A must be
also elements of B: x (x A x B).
We must show the following implication holds for any S
x (x x S)
Since the empty set does not contain any element, x is
always False
Then the implication is always True.
End of proof
CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Subset properties
Theorem: S S
Any set S is a subset of itself
Proof:
the definition of a subset says: all elements of a set A must be
also elements of B: x (x A x B).
Applying this to S we get:
x (x S x S) which is trivially True
End of proof
Note on equivalence:
Two sets are equal if each is a subset of the other set.
CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

A proper subset
Definition: A set A is said to be a proper subset of B if and only
if A B and A B. We denote that A is a proper subset of B
with the notation A B.
U

B
A

M. Hauskrecht

CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

A proper subset
Definition: A set A is said to be a proper subset of B if and only
if A B and A B. We denote that A is a proper subset of B
with the notation A B.
U

B
A

Example: A={1,2,3} B ={1,2,3,4,5}


Is: A B ? Yes.
CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Cardinality
Definition: Let S be a set. If there are exactly n distinct elements
in S, where n is a nonnegative integer, we say S is a finite set
and that n is the cardinality of S. The cardinality of S is
denoted by | S |.
Examples:
V={1 2 3 4 5}
|V|=5
A={1,2,3,4, , 20}
|A| =20
||=0
CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Infinite set
Definition: A set is infinite if it is not finite.
Examples:
The set of natural numbers is an infinite set.
N = {1, 2, 3, ... }
The set of reals is an infinite set.

CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Power set
Definition: Given a set S, the power set of S is the set of all subsets
of S. The power set is denoted by P(S).
Examples:
Assume an empty set
What is the power set of ? P() = { }
What is the cardinality of P() ? | P() | = 1.
Assume set {1}
P( {1} ) = { , {1} }
|P({1})| = 2

CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Power set
P( {1} ) = { , {1} }
|P({1})| = 2
Assume {1,2}
P( {1,2} ) = { , {1}, {2}, {1,2} }
|P({1,2} )| =4
Assume {1,2,3}
P({1,2,3}) = {, {1}, {2}, {3}, {1,2}, {1,3}, {2,3}, {1,2,3} }
|P({1,2,3} | = 8
If S is a set with |S| = n then | P(S) | = ?
CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Power set
P( {1} ) = { , {1} }
|P({1})| = 2
Assume {1,2}
P( {1,2} ) = { , {1}, {2}, {1,2} }
|P({1,2} )| =4
Assume {1,2,3}
P({1,2,3}) = {, {1}, {2}, {3}, {1,2}, {1,3}, {2,3}, {1,2,3} }
|P({1,2,3} | = 8
If S is a set with |S| = n then | P(S) | = 2n
M. Hauskrecht

CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

N-tuple
Sets are used to represent unordered collections.
Ordered-n tuples are used to represent an ordered collection.
Definition: An ordered n-tuple (x1, x2, ..., xN) is the ordered
collection that has x1 as its first element, x2 as its second
element, ..., and xN as its N-th element, N 2.
Example:

Coordinates of a point in the 2-D plane (12, 16)


CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

10

Cartesian product
Definition: Let S and T be sets. The Cartesian product of S and
T, denoted by S x T, is the set of all ordered pairs (s,t), where s
S and t T. Hence,

S x T = { (s,t) | s S t T}.
Examples:

S = {1,2} and T = {a,b,c}

S x T = { (1,a), (1,b), (1,c), (2,a), (2,b), (2,c) }

T x S = { (a,1), (a, 2), (b,1), (b,2), (c,1), (c,2) }


Note: S x T T x S !!!!

CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Cardinality of the Cartesian product


|S x T| = |S| * |T|.
Example:
A= {John, Peter, Mike}
B ={Jane, Ann, Laura}
A x B= {(John, Jane),(John, Ann) , (John, Laura), (Peter, Jane),
(Peter, Ann) , (Peter, Laura) , (Mike, Jane) , (Mike, Ann) ,
(Mike, Laura)}
|A x B| = 9
|A|=3, |B|=3 |A| |B|= 9

Definition: A subset of the Cartesian product A x B is called a


relation from the set A to the set B.
CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

11

Set operations
Definition: Let A and B be sets. The union of A and B, denoted
by A B, is the set that contains those elements that are either in
A or in B, or in both.
Alternate: A B = { x | x A x B }.
U

B
A

Example:
A = {1,2,3,6}
B = { 2,4,6,9}
A B = { 1,2,3,4,6,9 }
CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Set operations
Definition: Let A and B be sets. The intersection of A and B,
denoted by A B, is the set that contains those elements that are
in both A and B.
Alternate: A B = { x | x A x B }.
U

B
A

Example:
A = {1,2,3,6}
A B = { 2, 6 }

B = { 2, 4, 6, 9}

CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

12

Disjoint sets
Definition: Two sets are called disjoint if their intersection is
empty.
Alternate: A and B are disjoint if and only if A B = .
U

Example:
A={1,2,3,6} B={4,7,8} Are these disjoint?
Yes.
AB=
CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Cardinality of the set union


Cardinality of the set union.
|A B| = |A| + |B| - |A B|
U

B
A

Why this formula?

CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

13

Cardinality of the set union


Cardinality of the set union.
|A B| = |A| + |B| - |A B|
U

B
A

Why this formula? Correct for an over-count.


More general rule:
The principle of inclusion and exclusion.

CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

Set difference
Definition: Let A and B be sets. The difference of A and B,
denoted by A - B, is the set containing those elements that are in
A but not in B. The difference of A and B is also called the
complement of B with respect to A.
Alternate: A - B = { x | x A x B }.
U

B
A

Example: A= {1,2,3,5,7} B = {1,5,6,8}


A - B ={2,3,7}
CS 441 Discrete mathematics for CS

M. Hauskrecht

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