Math, asked by JasonR5536, 22 days ago

The order in which the elements of a set

Answers

Answered by bijo7979
1

Step-by-step explanation:

The order of elements in the set does not matter. We could just as well write S = {N ader, Buchanan, Gore, Bush}. In general, two sets are the same if and only if they have exactly the same members. “Gore ∈ S” reads “Gore is a member of the set S.” “∈” means “is a member of” or “is in”.

Answered by mamtadhiman329
0

Answer:

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