You are not logged in.
Pages: 1
hello all,
First question :
i have a R as such {A -> 1, A ->2, A -> 3, B -> 2, B -> 3, C -> 3}
my domain of R is {A, B, C} or {A, A, A, B, B, C} ?
i dont really understand this part
second question :
tis is off topic.. bt how to put partial function symbols, overriding symbols and such
woops foudn the solution for the second question ...so my real second question will be:
If f and g are elements of the set of
partial functions
i hope i got the symbols right
Last edited by MathsIsFun (2010-04-19 16:33:03)
mod! i need help im trying to place a maths question..im nt sure wht i did wrong..
Was that what you wanted?
"The physicists defer only to mathematicians, and the mathematicians defer only to God ..." - Leon M. Lederman
Offline
oh yess..thanks!!
i have a R as such {A -> 1, A ->2, A -> 3, B -> 2, B -> 3, C -> 3}
my domain of R is {A, B, C} or {A, A, A, B, B, C} ?
I am a little shaky on this topic myself, but...
Your R is from set {A, B, C} to set {1, 2, 3}. So the domain would be a union of those two sets: {A, B, C, 1, 2, 3}
Offline
No your domain is the set from which the function transforms from ie F: X->Y the domain is X and the range is Y so in this case domain is the set {A,B,C} and range is {1,2,3}
Offline
Oh ok..thnx..so it just takes the unique domain/range?
Second question solved i guess.. i'll post out the answer soon
Pages: 1