Different Types of Sets
Class 11 - Mathematics
A set is said to be empty set if it does not have any element. It is denoted by Φ or {}. Empty set is also called a null set or void set.
For example, The set of all odd natural numbers divisible by 2 is an empty set because odd natural numbers are not divisible by 2.
Finite Set:
A set which contains finite number of elements is called a finite set.
For example, The set {x: x ∈ N and x ≤ 10} is a finite set because number of elements in the set are countable.
Infinite Set:
A set which is not finite or which contains infinite number of elements is called an infinite set.
For example, the set of points on a line is an infinite set because a line have infinite points on it.
Singleton Set:
A set which contains only one element is called singleton set.
For example: {9} is a singleton set.
Equal Sets:
Two sets are said to be equal sets if they have same elements.
For example: Let A : {2, 4, 6, 8} and B : {x : x is an even natural number less than 10) are two equal sets because we can write B in roster form as
B = {2, 4, 6, 8}
Hence, A = B.
Equivalent Sets:
The two sets A and B are said to be equivalent ifn(A) = n(B)
For example: A : {2, 3, 5} and B : {a, b, c}
∴ n(A) : n(B) : 3
Universal Set:
A set which contain elements of all sets in a given context is called universal set. It is denoted by U.
e.g. if A = {1,2}, B = {1,2,3} and C = {1,3,4} then U = {1,2,3,4}
☛See also:
Special Mathematical Constants
SETS (Unit Test Paper)
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