Math, asked by qureshizubia9, 1 month ago

Q) Finite or infinite
1) set of people from your school​

Answers

Answered by chaubeyayush10
2

Step-by-step explanation:

For example, the set of vowels in English alphabets, Set A = {a, e, i, o, u} is a finite set as the elements of the set are countable. Infinite set can be understood as a set that is not finite. It is not possible to count the elements of an infinite set. The elements are endless or not countable.

Informally, a finite set is a set which one could in principle count and finish counting. For example, is a finite set with five elements. The number of elements of a finite set is a natural number (a non-negative integer) and is called the cardinality of the set. A set that is not finite is called infinite.

Answered by farihawaikar
0

Answer:

Finite

Explanation :

Finite sets are sets that have a fixed number of elements and are countable and can be written in roster form. An infinite set is a set that is not finite and the elements of the set are endless or uncountable and cannot be written in roster form. This is the basic difference between finite and infinite sets.

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