Subset

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Revision as of 21:10, 27 October 2024 by imported>Scalymath (I reduced the number of examples of subsets, since this does not seem the place to introduce natural numbers, negative numbers, and other types of numbers, when we just want to explain what a subset is.)
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In set theory, a set A is called a subset of a set B if all of the elements of A are contained in B. For example, any set is a subset of itself. Another example of a subset is a proper subset: a set A is called a proper subset of a set B if A is subset of B but is not equal to B.

A is a subset of B.

The symbol "" always means "is a subset of."[1][2][3] The symbol "" always means "is a proper subset of." There is also the symbol "", which some authors use to mean "is a subset of"[4] and other authors only use to mean "is a proper subset of."[1]

For example:

  • {3,7} is a subset of {3,7}, so we could write {3,7}{3,7}.
  • {3,7} is a proper subset of {1,3,4,7}, so we could write {3,7}{1,3,4,7},{3,7}{1,3,4,7}, or {3,7}{1,3,4,7}.

References

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