View Full Version : Need some help...
Ygmaince241
Jun23-04, 11:49 AM
Ok, I'm very new to calculus, and was stuck on the very basics of it. I'm only 14, but am extremely interested in math and science. I was inspired to study calculus when reading a book named, "Five Equations that changed the World", by Michael Guillen. Now I was doing some problems involving intervals. The book tells me to sketch the sets. The one problem is (-3,2] U (1, 7]. What exactly does the U stand for? The answer they gave for the example was, (1,2]. I know "(" stands for an open end, and "[" stands for a closed end. How do these apply to the sets. I couldn't see how they got the answer. Please help.
\cup is union (http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Union.html).
But are you sure the problem didn't ask for the intersection, (-3, 2] \cap (1, 7], of the intervals...?
Ok, I'm very new to calculus, and was stuck on the very basics of it. I'm only 14, but am extremely interested in math and science. I was inspired to study calculus when reading a book named, "Five Equations that changed the World", by Michael Guillen. Now I was doing some problems involving intervals. The book tells me to sketch the sets. The one problem is (-3,2] U (1, 7]. What exactly does the U stand for? The answer they gave for the example was, (1,2]. I know "(" stands for an open end, and "[" stands for a closed end. How do these apply to the sets. I couldn't see how they got the answer. Please help.Like Muzza said, that answer only makes sense if they were asking for the intersection of the two intervals, not the union. I don't exactly understand your problem. Do you understand what "open end", "closed end", "intersection", and "union" mean?
Ygmaince241
Jun23-04, 02:06 PM
Omg, yes. The problem was asking for an intersection. Sorry for not being specific enough.
Nexus[Free-DC]
Jun23-04, 07:01 PM
Hey there Ygmaince241.
With the union and intersection symbols it's sometimes a bit hard to remember which is which. I always think of it this way: \cupnion and i\captersection.
napoleonmax
Jun24-04, 08:18 PM
A good way to solve for unions and intersections (if you're really stuck) is to draw a number line with both sets on it. Union is all the numbers in both sets while intersection is the common numbers.
ex.
_____-1_____0_____1___
<~~~~~~~o (-infinity, 0) 0=open, •=closed
•~~~~~~~~~~> [-1, infinity)
Looking at this, you can clearly see that the intersection is [-1, 0) and the union is
(-infinity, infinity)
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