Difference between revisions of "Countable"

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A [[set]] <math>S</math> is said to be '''countable''' if there is an [[injection]] <math>f:S\to\mathbb{Z}</math>. Informally, a set is countable if it has at most as many elements as does the set of [[integer]]s.  The countable sets can be divided between those which are [[finite]] and those which are countably [[infinite]].   
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A [[set]] <math>S</math> is said to be '''countable''' if there is an [[injection]] <math>f:S\to\mathbb{Z}</math>. Informally, a set is countable if it has at most as many [[element]]s as does the set of [[integer]]s.  The countable sets can be divided between those which are [[finite]] and those which are countably [[infinite]].   
  
 
The name "countable" arises because the countably infinite sets are exactly those which can be put into [[bijection]] with the [[natural number]]s, i.e. those whose elements can be "counted."
 
The name "countable" arises because the countably infinite sets are exactly those which can be put into [[bijection]] with the [[natural number]]s, i.e. those whose elements can be "counted."

Revision as of 11:03, 11 November 2006

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A set $S$ is said to be countable if there is an injection $f:S\to\mathbb{Z}$. Informally, a set is countable if it has at most as many elements as does the set of integers. The countable sets can be divided between those which are finite and those which are countably infinite.

The name "countable" arises because the countably infinite sets are exactly those which can be put into bijection with the natural numbers, i.e. those whose elements can be "counted."

Countably infinite sets include the integers, the positive integers and the rational numbers.

Uncountable sets include the real numbers and the complex numbers.