Revision as of 10:22, 14 January 2013 by Mboutin (Talk | contribs)

Practice Problem on set operations


Consider the following sets:

$ \begin{align} S_1 &= \left\{ \frac{1}{2}, 1, 1.4, 2 \right\}, \\ S_2 & = \left\{ 0.\bar{9}, 1.40, \frac{42}{21}, 17\right\}. \\ \end{align} $

Write $ S_1 \cup S_2 $ explicitely. Is $ S_1 \cup S_2 $ a set?


Share your answers below

You will receive feedback from your instructor and TA directly on this page. Other students are welcome to comment/discuss/point out mistakes/ask questions too!


Answer 1

Instructor's note: This is really the second answer presented. It would be better if we could keep the first answer "as is", and put the correction as a second answer. Mistakes are nothing to be ashamed of! Making mistakes makes you learn! -pm


All elements in the following union are distinct, therefore the union is a set.

$ S_1 \cup S_2 = \{ \frac{1}{2}, 0{\color{red}\not}.\bar{9}, 1, 1.4, 2, 17 \} $

Lecture 3.PNG ($ S_1 \cup S_2 $ represented by colored region.)

WOW! That's a VERY nicely written answer. Great work. You only missed one little (somewhat tricky) detail. Can you guess what it is? MATH MAJORS: Can you help him? -pm
Okay, answer above edited to account for the following:
$ \frac{1}{9} = 0.\bar{1} $
$ \frac{1}{9} * 9 = 0.\bar{9} $
$ \frac{1}{9} * 9 = 1 $
$ \therefore 0.\bar{9} = 1 $
Instructor's comment: There you go! -pm

Answer 2

The union of S1 and S2 is all the elements in the Venn diagram: in S1, S2, and in both S1 and S2.


Answer 3

Write it here.


Back to ECE302 Spring 2013 Prof. Boutin

Back to ECE302

Alumni Liaison

Ph.D. 2007, working on developing cool imaging technologies for digital cameras, camera phones, and video surveillance cameras.

Buyue Zhang