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A survey was given to 339 people asking whether people like dogs and/or cats.

190 said they like dogs
141 said they like cats
88 said they don't like cats or dogs.

How many said they liked both cats and dogs?

User Bauss
by
5.2k points

1 Answer

1 vote

Answer:

80.

Explanation:

Let
C be the set of people who like cats and
D the set of people who like dogs. Under the cardinality theorem you have

n(CUD) = n(C) + n(D) - n(CnD)[/tex], isolating the
(C
(D , you have n
(C
(D = n(C) + n(D) -
(C
.</p><p>As a total of 339 individuals, and 88 are those who do not like cats or dogs, then 251 of them are those who like cats or dogs. Then, n[tex](C
(D
= 190 +141 -251 = 80

User Bryan Veloso
by
5.5k points