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Hi. I want to prove this:
thanks
Just like any set theory proof, start by assuming x is in (A U B)^c and show that x is in A^c U B^c. Then do the reverse way. It should be fairly straight forward, just expand on what complement and union mean.
"In the real world, this would be a problem. But in mathematics, we can just define a place where this problem doesn't exist. So we'll go ahead and do that now..."
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Just like any set theory proof, start by assuming x is in (A U B)^c and show that x is in A^c ∩ B^c.
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I sometimes think of it this way:
(A U B)' = A' ∩ B'
The left side is equal to:
((A ∩ B) U (A ∩ B') U (B ∩ A'))' = A' ∩ B'
Since you can only ever have 4 options: A ∩ B, A ∩ B', A' ∩ B, A' ∩ B', (like the law of trichotomy but for 4 versions) then what's not 3 of those must be the other:
A' ∩ B' = A' ∩ B'
Last edited by Identity (2007-11-02 12:10:57)
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There are 2 typos in Identity's 4th line.
Correct the ampersands("&") to become logical ORs.
And swap B and A in 2nd or 3rd term.
Also learn "Karnaugh mapping" if you want to be awesome at it. It's digital electronics stuff.
igloo myrtilles fourmis
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Thanks John, I keep thinking & is disjunction!
Yeah, Karnaugh Mapping is brilliant! They are invaluable in many set theory and probability problems! I'd take them over Venn Diagrams anyday!
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Hey guys, I'm actually struggling with the same issue; I'm taking a discrete mathematics class and struggling heavily in even understanding the principles of the stuff. However, I'm in desperate need to solve this proof and was hoping you could help.
The formula, of course is, (A U B)^c = A^c ∩ B^c
I've gotten as far as saying that x is an element of A^c or B^c, but don't know how to make the leap to the other side of the equals sign to A^c ∩ B^c. I've been up for the better part of 2 hrs trying to reason this thing, but with no luck. Remember that this is for an entry level discrete mathematics course, so the logic and equations can't be too complicated or you'll lose me. Any help anyone can offer would be MOST appreciated. Thanks all!
~Dave
I've gotten as far as saying that x is an element of A^c or B^c
You should get that x is an element of A^c and B^c.
"In the real world, this would be a problem. But in mathematics, we can just define a place where this problem doesn't exist. So we'll go ahead and do that now..."
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