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Two sets are equal if they contain the

same elements. I.e., sets A and B are equal if
∀x[x ∈ A ↔ x ∈ B].
Notation: A = B.
Recall: Sets are unordered and we do not distinguish
between repeated elements. So:
{1, 1, 1} = {1}, and {a, b, c} = {b, a, c}.

User Berramou
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1 Answer

6 votes

Answer:

Definition: Two sets are equal if they contain the

same elements. I.e., sets A and B are equal if

∀x[x ∈ A ↔ x ∈ B].

Notation: A = B.

Recall: Sets are unordered and we do not distinguish

between repeated elements. So:

{1, 1, 1} = {1}, and {a, b, c} = {b, a, c}.

Definition: A set A is a subset of set B, denoted

A ⊆ B, if every element x of A is also an element of B.

That is, A ⊆ B if ∀x(x ∈ A → x ∈ B).

Example: Z ⊆ R.

{1, 2} ⊆ {1, 2, 3, 4}

Notation: If set A is not a subset of B, we write A 6⊆ B.

Example: {1, 2} 6⊆ {1, 3}

User Girish Sakhare
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