59 KiB
title | TARGET DECK | FILE TAGS | tags | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Functions | Obsidian::STEM | set::function |
|
Overview
A function F
is a single-valued relations. We say F
maps A
into B
, denoted F \colon A \rightarrow B
, if and only if F
is a function, \mathop{\text{dom}}F = A
, and \mathop{\text{ran}}F \subseteq B
.
%%ANKI Basic Which of relations or functions is the more general concept? Back: Relations. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What is a function?
Back: A relation F
such that for each x \in \mathop{\text{dom}}F
, there exists a unique y
such that xFy
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
For function F
and x \in \mathop{\text{dom}}F
, what name is given to F(x)
?
Back: The value of F
at x
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Who introduced the function notation F(x)
?
Back: Leonhard Euler.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
be a function and \langle x, y \rangle \in F
. Rewrite the membership as an expression excluding y
.
Back: \langle x, F(x) \rangle \in F
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
be a function and \langle x, y \rangle \in F
. Rewrite the membership as an expression excluding x
.
Back: N/A.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider notation F(x)
. What assumption is F
assumed to satisfy?
Back: It is assumed to be a function.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider notation F(x)
. What assumption is x
assumed to satisfy?
Back: It is assumed to be in the domain of F
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Cloze A function is a {single-valued} relation. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is F \colon A \rightarrow B
pronounced?
Back: F
maps A
into B
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What three conditions hold iff F
maps A
into B
?
Back: F
is a function, \mathop{\text{dom}}F = A
, and \mathop{\text{ran}}F \subseteq B
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider function F \colon A \rightarrow B
. What term is used to refer to A
?
Back: The domain.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider function F \colon A \rightarrow B
. What term is used to refer to B
?
Back: The codomain.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic How does the range of a function compare to its codomain? Back: The range is a subset of the codomain. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Is \varnothing
a function?
Back: Yes.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
, G
be functions such that F \subseteq G
. How does \mathop{\text{dom}}F
relate to \mathop{\text{dom}}G
?
Back: \mathop{\text{dom}}F \subseteq \mathop{\text{dom}}G
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
, G
be functions such that F \subseteq G
. How does \mathop{\text{ran}}F
relate to \mathop{\text{ran}}G
?
Back: \mathop{\text{ran}}F \subseteq \mathop{\text{ran}}G
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
, G
be functions. Is F \cap G
a function?
Back: Yes.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
, G
be functions. When is F \cap G
a function?
Back: Always.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
, G
be functions. Is F \cup G
a function?
Back: Not necessarily.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
, G
be functions. When is F \cup G
a function?
Back: Iff f(x) = g(x)
for every x \in \mathop{\text{dom}}F \cap \mathop{\text{dom}}G
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
Injections
A function is injective or one-to-one if each element of the codomain is mapped to by at most one element of the domain.
%%ANKI Basic What does it mean for a function to be injective? Back: Each element of the codomain is mapped to by at most one element of the domain. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI Basic What does it mean for a function to be one-to-one? Back: Each element of the codomain is mapped to by at most one element of the domain. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Each element of an injection's codomain is mapped to by how many elements of the domain? Back: At most one. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Suppose Function.Injective f
for f \colon A \rightarrow B
. What predicate logical formula describes f
?
Back: \forall a_1, a_2 \in A, (f(a_1) = f(a_2) \Rightarrow a_1 = a_2
)
Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
Tags: lean logic::predicate
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Does the following depict an injection? ! Back: Yes. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Does the following depict a one-to-one function? ! Back: Yes. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Does the following depict a one-to-one function? ! Back: No. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Why isn't the following an injection?
!
Back: Both 1 \mapsto d
and 2 \mapsto d
.
Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Is a single-valued set a function? Back: Not necessarily. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Is a single-valued relation a function? Back: Yes. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Is a single-rooted set a function? Back: Not necessarily. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Is a single-rooted relation a function? Back: Not necessarily. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Cloze {One-to-one} is to functions whereas {single-rooted} is to relations. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Is a one-to-one function a single-rooted relation? Back: Yes. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Is a single-rooted relation a one-to-one function? Back: Not necessarily. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Is a single-rooted function a one-to-one function? Back: Yes. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
Left Inverses
Assume that F \colon A \rightarrow B
is a function and A \neq \varnothing
. Then there exists a function G \colon B \rightarrow A
(a left inverse) such that G \circ F = I_A
if and only if F
is one-to-one.
%%ANKI Basic What is the most specific mathematical object that describes a left inverse? Back: A function. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is a left inverse of F \colon A \rightarrow B
defined?
Back: As a function G \colon B \rightarrow A
such that G \circ F = I_A
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is a left inverse of set A
defined?
Back: N/A.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider F \colon A \rightarrow B
. If F
has a left inverse, what is its domain?
Back: B
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What does I_A
usually denote?
Back: The identity function on set A
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is the identity function on set B
denoted?
Back: I_B
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider F \colon A \rightarrow B
. If F
has a left inverse, what is its codomain?
Back: A
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let G
be a left inverse of F \colon A \rightarrow B
. How can we more compactly write G \circ F
?
Back: I_A
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let G
be a left inverse of F \colon A \rightarrow B
. How can we more compactly write F \circ G
?
Back: N/A.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
be a left inverse of function G
. How do they interestingly compose?
Back: As F \circ G
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Cloze
Suppose F \colon A \rightarrow B
and {1:A \neq \varnothing
}. F
has a {2:left} inverse iff F
is {3:one-to-one}.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Does proving "left inverses iff injective" rely on AoC? Back: No. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What are the hypotheses of "left inverses iff injective"?
Back: Suppose F \colon A \rightarrow B
such that A \neq \varnothing
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
. Why does "left inverses iff injective" assume A \neq \varnothing
?
Back: Because a mapping from nonempty B
to \varnothing
cannot be a function.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
and A \neq \varnothing
. Why does "left inverses iff injective" require AoC?
Back: It doesn't.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
Surjections
A function is surjective or onto if each element of the codomain is mapped to by at least one element of the domain. That is, F
maps A
onto B
if and only if F
is a function, \mathop{\text{dom}}A
, and \mathop{\text{ran}}F = B
.
%%ANKI Basic What does it mean for function to be surjective? Back: Each element of the codomain is mapped to by at least one element of the domain. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI Basic What does it mean for a function to be onto? Back: Each element of the codomain is mapped to by at least one element of the domain. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Each element of a surjection's codomain is mapped to by how many elements of the domain? Back: At least one. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Suppose Function.Surjective f
for f \colon A \rightarrow B
. What predicate logical formula describes f
?
Back: \forall b \in B, \exists a \in A, f(a) = b
Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
Tags: lean logic::predicate
END%%
%%ANKI Cloze {1:Injective} is to {2:one-to-one} as {2:surjective} is to {1:onto}. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What three conditions hold iff F
maps A
onto B
?
Back: F
is a function, \mathop{\text{dom}}F = A
, and \mathop{\text{ran}}F = B
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
map A
into B
. Does F
map A
onto B
?
Back: Not necessarily.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
map A
onto B
. Does F
map A
into B
?
Back: Yes.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Cloze
Let F
be a function. Then F
maps {\mathop{\text{dom} }F
} onto {\mathop{\text{ran} }F
}.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Does the following depict a surjection? ! Back: Yes. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Does the following depict an onto function? ! Back: No. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Does the following depict an onto function? ! Back: Yes. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Why isn't the following a surjection?
!
Back: No element of X
maps to a
or b
.
Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
Right Inverses
Assume that F \colon A \rightarrow B
is a function and A \neq \varnothing
. Then there exists a function G \colon B \rightarrow A
(a right inverse) such that F \circ G = I_B
if and only if F
maps A
onto B
.
%%ANKI Basic What is the most specific mathematical object that describes a right inverse? Back: A function. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is a right inverse of F \colon A \rightarrow B
defined?
Back: As a function G \colon B \rightarrow A
such that F \circ G = I_B
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is a right inverse of set A
defined?
Back: N/A.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Cloze {1:Left} inverses are to {2:injections} whereas {2:right} inverses are to {1:surjections}. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider F \colon A \rightarrow B
. If F
has a right inverse, what is its domain?
Back: B
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider F \colon A \rightarrow B
. If F
has a right inverse, what is its codomain?
Back: A
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let G
be a right inverse of F \colon A \rightarrow B
. How can we more compactly write G \circ F
?
Back: N/A.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let G
be a right inverse of F \colon A \rightarrow B
. How can we more compactly write F \circ G
?
Back: I_B
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
be a right inverse of function G
. How do they interestingly compose?
Back: As G \circ F
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Cloze
Suppose F \colon A \rightarrow B
and {1:A \neq \varnothing
}. F
has a {2:right} inverse iff F
is {3:onto B
}.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Does proving "right inverses iff surjective" rely on AoC? Back: Yes. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What are the hypotheses of "right inverses iff surjective"?
Back: Suppose F \colon A \rightarrow B
such that A \neq \varnothing
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
. Why does "right inverses iff surjective" assume A \neq \varnothing
?
Back: Because a mapping from nonempty B
to \varnothing
cannot be a function.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
and A \neq \varnothing
. Why does "right inverses iff surjective" require AoC?
Back: There is no other mechanism for choosing an x \in A
for each y \in B
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
Bijections
A function is bijective or a one-to-one correspondence if each element of the codomain is mapped to by exactly one element of the domain.
%%ANKI Basic What does it mean for a function to be bijective? Back: It is both injective and surjective. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Each element of a bijection's codomain is mapped to by how many elements of the domain? Back: Exactly one. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI Cloze {1:Injective} is to {2:one-to-one} as {2:bijective} is to {1:one-to-one correspondence}. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI Cloze {1:Surjective} is to {2:onto} as {2:bijective} is to {1:one-to-one correspondence}. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Does the following depict a bijection? ! Back: Yes. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Why isn't the following a one-to-one correspondence?
!
Back: The function does not map onto Y
.
Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Why isn't the following a one-to-one correspondence? ! Back: The function is not one-to-one. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
%%ANKI Basic What distinguishes a one-to-one function from a one-to-one correspondence? Back: The former is not necessarily surjective. Reference: “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
END%%
Inverses
Let F
be an arbitrary set. The inverse of F
is the set $F^{-1} = \{\langle u, v \rangle \mid vFu\}
$
%%ANKI
Basic
What is the most specific mathematical object that describes an inverse?
Back: A relation.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic What kind of mathematical object does the inverse operation apply to? Back: Sets. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What is the "arity" of the inverse operation in set theory?
Back: 1
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
be a set. How is the inverse of F
denoted?
Back: F^{-1}
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic What kind of mathematical object does the inverse operation emit? Back: Relations. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is the inverse of set F
defined in set-builder notation?
Back: F^{-1} = \{\langle u, v \rangle \mid vFu\}
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider set A
. Is A^{-1}
a relation?
Back: Yes.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider set A
. Is A^{-1}
a function?
Back: Not necessarily.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider relation R
. Is R^{-1}
a relation?
Back: Yes.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider relation R
. Is R^{-1}
a function?
Back: Not necessarily.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider function F \colon A \rightarrow B
. Is F^{-1}
a relation?
Back: Yes.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider function F \colon A \rightarrow B
. Is F^{-1}
a function?
Back: Not necessarily.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
be an injection. Is F^{-1}
a function?
Back: Yes.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
be an injection. Is F^{-1}
one-to-one?
Back: Yes.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
be an injection. Is F^{-1}
onto A
?
Back: Yes.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
be a surjection. Is F^{-1}
a function?
Back: Not necessarily.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
be a surjection. Is F^{-1}
a relation?
Back: Yes.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider function F \colon A \rightarrow B
. What is the domain of F^{-1}
?
Back: \mathop{\text{ran}}F
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider function F \colon A \rightarrow B
. What is the range of F^{-1}
?
Back: A
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider function F
. How does (F^{-1})^{-1}
relate to F
?
Back: They are equal.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider relation R
. How does (R^{-1})^{-1}
relate to R
?
Back: They are equal.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider set A
. How does (A^{-1})^{-1}
relate to A
?
Back: (A^{-1})^{-1}
is a subset of A
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
When does A \neq (A^{-1})^{-1}
?
Back: If there exists an x \in A
such that x
is not an ordered pair.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is set \{\langle u, v \rangle \mid vAu\}
more simply denoted?
Back: A^{-1}
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What does \varnothing^{-1}
evalute to?
Back: \varnothing
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Given set F
, what does \mathop{\text{dom}}F^{-1}
evaluate to?
Back: \mathop{\text{ran}}F
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Given set F
, what does \mathop{\text{ran}}F^{-1}
evaluate to?
Back: \mathop{\text{dom}}F
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Cloze
For any set F
, {1:F
} is {2:single-valued} iff {2:F^{-1}
} is {1:single-rooted}.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider function F \colon \varnothing \rightarrow B
. What is F^{-1}
?
Back: \varnothing
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
Compositions
Let F
and G
be arbitrary sets. The composition of F
and G
is the set $F \circ G = \{\langle u, v \rangle \mid \exists t, uGt \land tFv \}
$
%%ANKI Basic What kind of mathematical object does the composition operation apply to? Back: Sets. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic What kind of mathematical object does the composition operation emit? Back: Relations. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
and G
be arbitrary sets. How is the composition of G
and F
denoted?
Back: G \circ F
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
and G
be arbitrary sets. How is the composition of F
and G
denoted?
Back: F \circ G
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What is the "arity" of the composition operation in set theory?
Back: 2
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Cloze
{(F \circ G)(x)
} is alternatively written as {F(G(x))
}.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is the composition of sets F
and G
defined in set-builder notation?
Back: F \circ G = \{\langle u, v \rangle \mid \exists t, uGt \land tFv\}
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is set \{\langle u, v \rangle \mid \exists t, uBt \land tAv \}
more simply denoted?
Back: A \circ B
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
be an arbitrary set. What is F \circ \varnothing
?
Back: \varnothing
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
be an arbitrary set. What is \varnothing \circ F
?
Back: \varnothing
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Cloze
Let F
be a {function}. If t \in
{\mathop{\text{ran} }F
}, then F(F^{-1}(t)) = t
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Cloze
Let F
be an {injection}. If t \in
{\mathop{\text{dom} }F
}, then F^{-1}(F(t)) = t
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
If A
is single-valued and B
is single-valued, is A \circ B
single-valued?
Back: Yes.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
If A
is single-valued and B
is single-rooted, is A \circ B
single-valued?
Back: Not necessarily.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
If A
is single-rooted and B
is single-rooted, is A \circ B
single-rooted?
Back: Yes.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
If F
is a relation and G
is a function, is F \circ G
a function?
Back: Not necessarily.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
If F
is a function and G
is a relation, is F \circ G
a function?
Back: Not necessarily.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
If F
is a function and G
is a function, is F \circ G
a function?
Back: Yes.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
If F
is an injection and G
is an injection, is F \circ G
an injection?
Back: Yes.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
If F
is an injection and G
is a surjection, is F \circ G
a bijection?
Back: Not necessarily.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
If F
is an injection and G
is a bijection, is F \circ G
a bijection?
Back: Not necessarily.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
If F
is a bijection and G
is a bijection, is F \circ G
a bijection?
Back: Yes.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
and G
be functions. How is \mathop{\text{dom}}(F \circ G)
defined using set-builder notation?
Back: \{x \in \mathop{\text{dom}}G \mid G(x) \in \mathop{\text{dom}}F\}
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Cloze
For any sets F
and G
, {(F \circ G)^{-1}
} =
{G^{-1} \circ F^{-1}
}.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How might you explain (F \circ G)^{-1} = G^{-1} \circ F^{-1}
in plain English?
Back: The opposite of applying G
then F
is to undo F
then G
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Is composition commutative? Back: No. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Is composition associative? Back: Yes. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Cloze
For sets A
, B
, and C
, {(A \circ B)[\![C]\!]
} =
{A[\![B[\![C]\!]]\!]
}.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
Restrictions
Let F
and A
be arbitrary sets. The restriction of F
to A
is the set $F \restriction A = \{\langle u, v \rangle \mid uFv \land u \in A\}
$
%%ANKI Basic What kind of mathematical object does the restriction operation apply to? Back: Sets. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Cloze
F \restriction A
is the restriction of F
{to} A
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic What kind of mathematical object does the restriction operation emit? Back: Relations. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What is the "arity" of the restriction operation in set theory?
Back: 2
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is the restriction of F
to A
denoted?
Back: F \restriction A
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is the restriction of F
to A
defined?
Back: F \restriction A = \{\langle u, v \rangle \mid uFv \land u \in A\}
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider function F \colon A \rightarrow B
. How does \mathop{\text{dom}}F
relate to \mathop{\text{dom}}(F \restriction A)
?
Back: They are equal.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider function F \colon A \rightarrow B
. How does \mathop{\text{ran}}F
relate to \mathop{\text{ran}}(F \restriction A)
?
Back: They are equal.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider function F \colon A \rightarrow B
and set C \subseteq A
. How does \mathop{\text{dom}}F
relate to \mathop{\text{dom}}(F \restriction C)
?
Back: \mathop{\text{dom}}(F \restriction C) \subseteq \mathop{\text{dom}}F
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is F \restriction A
pronounced?
Back: The restriction of F
to A
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider function F \colon A \rightarrow B
and set C \subseteq A
. How does \mathop{\text{ran}}F
relate to \mathop{\text{ran}}(F \restriction C)
?
Back: \mathop{\text{ran}}(F \restriction C) \subseteq \mathop{\text{ran}}F
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is set \{\langle u, v \rangle \mid uAv \land u \in B\}
more simply denoted?
Back: A \restriction B
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
be an arbitrary set. What is F \restriction \varnothing
?
Back: \varnothing
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Cloze
Let Q
, A
, and B
be sets. Then {Q \restriction (A \cup B)
} =
{(Q \restriction A) \cup (Q \restriction B)
}.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Cloze
Let Q
, A
, and B
be sets. Then {Q \restriction (A \cap B)
} =
{(Q \restriction A) \cap (Q \restriction B)
}.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider sets A
and B
. How is B \restriction A
rewritten as a composition?
Back: B \circ I_A
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider sets A
and B
. How is A \circ I_B
rewritten as a restriction?
Back: A \restriction B
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider sets A
and B
. How is A \cap B
rewritten as a function under some image?
Back: I_A[\![B]\!]
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider sets A
and B
. How is I_B[\![A]\!]
rewritten as a simpler set operation?
Back: B \cap A
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
Images
Let F
and A
be sets. Then the image of F
under A
is $F[\![A]\!] = \{v \mid \exists u \in A, uFv\}
$
%%ANKI Basic What kind of mathematical object does the image operation apply to? Back: Sets. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic What kind of mathematical object does the image operation emit? Back: Sets. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Cloze
F[\![A]\!]
is the image of F
{under} A
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What is the "arity" of the image operation in set theory?
Back: 2
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is the image of F
under A
denoted?
Back: F[\![A]\!]
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is the image of F
under A
defined?
Back: F[\![A]\!] = \{v \mid \exists u \in A, uFv\}
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is the image of F
under A
defined in terms of restrictions?
Back: F[\![A]\!] = \mathop{\text{ran}}(F \restriction A)
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is set \{v \mid \exists u \in B, uAv\}
more simply denoted?
Back: A[\![B]\!]
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Enderton says "multiple-valued functions" are actually what? Back: Relations. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic Enderton says "multiple-valued functions" are actually what? Back: Relations. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977). END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Enderton says "F^{-1}(9) = \pm 3
" is preferably written in what way?
Back: F^{-1}[\![\{9\}]\!] = \{-3, 3\}
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F
be an arbitrary set. What is F[\![\varnothing]\!]
?
Back: \varnothing
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
The following holds for any sets F
, A
, B
, and \mathscr{A}
:
- The image of unions is the union of the images:
F[\![\bigcup\mathscr{A}]\!] = \bigcup\,\{F[\![A]\!] \mid A \in \mathscr{A}\}
- The image of intersections is a subset of the intersection of images:
F[\![\bigcap \mathscr{A}]\!] \subseteq \bigcap\,\{F[\![A]\!] \mid A \in \mathscr{A}\}
for\mathscr{A} \neq \varnothing
- Equality holds if
F
is single-rooted.
- The image of a difference includes the difference of the images:
F[\![A]\!] - F[\![B]\!] \subseteq F[\![A - B]\!]
- Equality holds if
F
is single-rooted.
%%ANKI Basic How does the image of unions relate to the union of the images? Back: They are equal. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic How does the union of images relate to the images of the unions? Back: They are equal. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How does F[\![A \cup B]\!]
relate to F[\![A]\!] \cup F[\![B]\!]
?
Back: They are equal.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What is the generalization of identity F[\![A \cup B]\!] = F[\![A]\!] \cup F[\![B]\!]
?
Back: F[\![\bigcup\mathscr{A}]\!] = \bigcup\,\{F[\![A]\!] \mid A \in \mathscr{A}\}
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What is the specialization of identity F[\![\bigcup\mathscr{A}]\!] = \bigcup\,\{F[\![A]\!] \mid A \in \mathscr{A}\}
?
Back: F[\![A \cup B]\!] = F[\![A]\!] \cup F[\![B]\!]
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Why is the following identity intuitively true? $F[\![A \cup B]\!] = F[\![A]\!] \cup F[\![B]\!]
$
Back: F(x)
is in the range of F
regardless of whether x \in A
or x \in B
(or both).
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic How does the image of intersections relate to the intersection of the images? Back: The former is a subset of the latter. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic How does the intersection of images relate to the image of the intersections? Back: The latter is a subset of the former. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What condition on set F
makes the following true? F[\![A \cap B]\!] \subseteq F[\![A]\!] \cap F[\![B]\!]
Back: N/A. This is always true.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What condition on set F
makes the following true? F[\![A \cap B]\!] = F[\![A]\!] \cap F[\![B]\!]
Back: F
is single-rooted.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What condition on set F
makes the following true? F[\![A]\!] \cap F[\![B]\!] \subseteq F[\![A \cap B]\!]
Back: F
is single-rooted.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What is the generalization of identity F[\![A \cap B]\!] \subseteq F[\![A]\!] \cap F[\![B]\!]
?
Back: F[\![\bigcap\mathscr{A}]\!] \subseteq \bigcap\,\{F[\![A]\!] \mid A \in \mathscr{A}\}
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What is the specialization of identity F[\![\bigcap\mathscr{A}]\!] \subseteq \bigcap\,\{F[\![A]\!] \mid A \in \mathscr{A}\}
?
Back: F[\![A \cap B]\!] \subseteq F[\![A]\!] \cap F[\![B]\!]
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What \varnothing
-based example is used to show the following is intuitively true? $F[\![A \cap B]\!] \subseteq F[\![A]\!] \cap F[\![B]\!]
$
Back: A
and B
might be disjoint even if F[\![A]\!]
and F[\![B]\!]
are not.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
The following is analagous to what logical expression of commuting quantifiers? $F[\![A \cap B]\!] \subseteq F[\![A]\!] \cap F[\![B]\!]
$
Back: \exists x, \forall y, P(x, y) \Rightarrow \forall y, \exists x, P(x, y)
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Given single-rooted R
, the following is analagous to what logical expression of commuting quantifiers? $R[\![A \cap B]\!] = R[\![A]\!] \cap R[\![B]\!]
$
Back: \exists x, \forall y, P(x, y) \Leftrightarrow \forall y, \exists x, P(x, y)
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic How does the image of differences relate to the difference of the images? Back: The latter is a subset of the former. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI Basic How does the difference of images relate to the image of the differences? Back: The former is a subset of the latter. Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What \varnothing
-based example is used to show the following is intuitively true? $F[\![A]\!] - F[\![B]\!] \subseteq F[\![A - B]\!]
$
Back: F[\![A]\!]
and F[\![B]\!]
might be the same sets even if A \neq B
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What condition on set F
makes the following true? F[\![A - B]\!] \subseteq F[\![A]\!] - F[\![B]\!]
Back: F
is single-rooted.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What condition on set F
makes the following true? F[\![A - B]\!] = F[\![A]\!] - F[\![B]\!]
Back: F
is single-rooted.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
What condition on set F
makes the following true? F[\![A]\!] - F[\![B]\!] \subseteq F[\![A - B]\!]
Back: N/A. This is always true.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Suppose A \subseteq B
. How does F[\![A]\!]
relate to F[\![B]\!]
?
Back: F[\![A]\!] \subseteq F[\![B]\!]
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
Kernels
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
. Define relations#Equivalence Relations \sim
as $x \sim y \Leftrightarrow f(x) = f(y)
$
Relation \sim
is called the (equivalence) kernel of f
. The relations#Partitions induced by \sim
on A
is called the coimage of f
(denoted \mathop{\text{coim}}f
). The fiber of an element y
under F
is F^{-1}[\![\{y\}]\!]
, i.e. the preimage of singleton set \{y\}
. Therefore the equivalence classes of \sim
are also known as the fibers of f
.
%%ANKI
Basic
What kind of mathematical object is the kernel of F \colon A \rightarrow B
?
Back: An equivalence relation.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is the kernel of F \colon A \rightarrow B
defined?
Back: As equivalence relation \sim
such that x \sim y \Leftrightarrow F(x) = F(y)
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
. What name does the following relation \sim
go by? $x \sim y \Leftrightarrow F(x) = F(y)
$
Back: The kernel of F
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
. The partition induced by the kernel of F
is a partition of what set?
Back: A
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
. What does \mathop{\text{coim}}F
refer to?
Back: The coimage of F
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
How is the coimage of function F \colon A \rightarrow B
defined?
Back: As A / {\sim}
where x \sim y \Leftrightarrow F(x) = F(y)
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
. What specific name does a member of \mathop{\text{coim}}F
go by?
Back: A fiber.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
. How is the fiber of y
under F
defined?
Back: As set F^{-1}[\![\{y\}]\!]
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
. The fibers of F
make up what set?
Back: \mathop{\text{coim}}F
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
. How is \mathop{\text{coim}}F
denoted as a quotient set?
Back: As A / {\sim}
where x \sim y \Leftrightarrow F(x) = F(y)
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Let F \colon A \rightarrow B
and \sim
be the kernel of F
. How does F
factor into \hat{F} \colon A / {\sim} \rightarrow B
?
Back: F = \hat{F} \circ \phi
where \phi
is the natural map.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider factoring F \colon A \rightarrow B
by its kernel \sim
. What name does \phi
go by?
!
Back: The natural map (with respect to \sim
).
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider factoring F \colon A \rightarrow B
by its kernel \sim
. How is \phi
defined?
!
Back: \phi(x) = [x]_{\sim}
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider factoring F \colon A \rightarrow B
by its kernel \sim
. What name does \sim
go by?
!
Back: \mathop{\text{coim}} F
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider factoring F \colon A \rightarrow B
by its kernel \sim
. What name do the members of A / {\sim}
go by?
!
Back: The fibers of F
.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider factoring F \colon A \rightarrow B
by its kernel \sim
. What composition is F
equal to?
!
Back: F = \hat{F} \circ \phi
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider factoring F \colon A \rightarrow B
by its kernel \sim
. Is \hat{F}
injective?
!
Back: Yes.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider factoring F \colon A \rightarrow B
by its kernel \sim
. Is \hat{F}
surjective?
!
Back: Not necessarily.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
%%ANKI
Basic
Consider factoring F \colon A \rightarrow B
by its kernel \sim
. Is \hat{F}
bijective?
!
Back: Not necessarily.
Reference: Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
END%%
Bibliography
- “Bijection, Injection and Surjection,” in Wikipedia, May 2, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijection_injection_and_surjection.
- “Fiber (Mathematics),” in Wikipedia, April 10, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fiber_(mathematics)&oldid=1218193490.
- Herbert B. Enderton, Elements of Set Theory (New York: Academic Press, 1977).
- “Kernel (Set Theory),” in Wikipedia, May 22, 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kernel_(set_theory)&oldid=1225189560.