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  2. Ring of sets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ring_of_sets

    If X is any set, then the power set of X (the family of all subsets of X) forms a ring of sets in either sense.. If (X, ≤) is a partially ordered set, then its upper sets (the subsets of X with the additional property that if x belongs to an upper set U and x ≤ y, then y must also belong to U) are closed under both intersections and unions.

  3. Ring (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ring_(mathematics)

    A ring is a set R equipped with two binary operations [a] + (addition) and ⋅ (multiplication) satisfying the following three sets of axioms, called the ring axioms: [1] [2] [3] R is an abelian group under addition, meaning that: (a + b) + c = a + (b + c) for all a, b, c in R (that is, + is associative). a + b = b + a for all a, b in R (that ...

  4. Glossary of set theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_set_theory

    (In ring theory it is used for the exclusive or operation) ~ 1. The difference of two sets: x~y is the set of elements of x not in y. 2. An equivalence relation \ The difference of two sets: x\y is the set of elements of x not in y. − The difference of two sets: x−y is the set of elements of x not in y. ≈ Has the same cardinality as × A ...

  5. Sigma-ring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sigma-ring

    π-system – Family of sets closed under intersection; Ring of sets – Family closed under unions and relative complements; Sample space – Set of all possible outcomes or results of a statistical trial or experiment; 𝜎 additivity – Mapping function; σ-algebra – Algebraic structure of set algebra

  6. Carathéodory's extension theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carathéodory's_extension...

    For a semi-ring , the set of all finite unions of sets in is the ring generated by : = {: = =,} (One can show that () is equal to the set of all finite disjoint unions of sets in ). A content μ {\displaystyle \mu } defined on a semi-ring S {\displaystyle S} can be extended on the ring generated by S . {\displaystyle S.}

  7. Multiplicatively closed set - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiplicatively_closed_set

    Examples of multiplicative sets include: the set-theoretic complement of a prime ideal in a commutative ring; the set {1, x, x 2, x 3, ...}, where x is an element of a ring; the set of units of a ring; the set of non-zero-divisors in a ring; 1 + I for an ideal I; the Jordan–Pólya numbers, the multiplicative closure of the factorials.