Math, asked by pravinjha, 5 months ago

difference between empty set and void set​

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Answered by vanishasaxena09
1

Answer:

In measure theory, a null set refers to a set of measure zero. For example, in the reals, R with its standard measure (Lebesgue measure), the set of rationals Q has measure 0, so Q is a null set in R. ... In contrast, the empty set always refers to the unique set with no elements, denoted {}, ∅ or ∅.

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Answered by shreyasinha28
0

Answer:

Void Or Empty Set

The empty set is the unique set having no elements; its size or cardinality (count of elements in a set) is zero. The empty set may also be called the void set.

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