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Cartesian Product of Sets

A cartesian product between two sets is defined as the set consisting of all possible ordered pairs that can be formed by taking one element from each of the sets at a given time. If A and B are two sets such that a ∈ A and b ∈ B, then the cartesian product between A...

Tuples

In mathematics, a tuple or a sequence is a list of objects arranged in an order. Such a list may have repeated objects but the order is more important. Such sequences or tuples are denoted as ( t1, t2, t3, …., tn ) where tn is the nth element of the list. Below are a...

Ordered Pairs

An ordered pair is a 2-tuple formed by taking two elements (generally numbers but can be alphabets, characters, words, or symbols). The general form of representation is (a, b) where a and b represent two distinct objects. The important thing with ordered pairs is...

Cartesian Product

The cartesian product of two sets A and B is defined as a set formed by all the possible ordered pairs of elements from A and B, such that the first element comes from set A and the second element comes from set B. The cartesian product is denoted as A × B....
Intersection operation on two sets

Intersection operation on two sets

The intersection of two sets A & B is defined as a set that contains only those members which are common to both A and B. The intersection operation is denoted by the symbol ∩. Remember, for two disjoint sets (sets having no common elements), the...