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- Q1477744 subject Q7145034.
- Q1477744 abstract "In mathematics, an unordered pair or pair set is a set of the form {a, b}, i.e. a set having two elements a and b with no particular relation between them. In contrast, an ordered pair (a, b) has a as its first element and b as its second element. While the two elements of an ordered pair (a, b) need not be distinct, modern authors only call {a, b} an unordered pair if a ≠ b.But for a few authors a singleton is also considered an unordered pair, although today, most would say that {a,a} is a multiset. It is typical to use the term unordered pair even in the situation where the elements a and b could be equal, as long as this equality has not yet been established.A set with precisely two elements is also called a 2-set or (rarely) a binary set.An unordered pair is a finite set; its cardinality (number of elements) is 2 or (if the two elements are not distinct) 1.In axiomatic set theory, the existence of unordered pairs is required by an axiom, the axiom of pairing.More generally, an unordered n-tuple is a set of the form {a1, a2,... an}.".
- Q1477744 wikiPageWikiLink Q1165112.
- Q1477744 wikiPageWikiLink Q12482.
- Q1477744 wikiPageWikiLink Q191290.
- Q1477744 wikiPageWikiLink Q2076913.
- Q1477744 wikiPageWikiLink Q272404.
- Q1477744 wikiPageWikiLink Q36161.
- Q1477744 wikiPageWikiLink Q395.
- Q1477744 wikiPageWikiLink Q4049983.
- Q1477744 wikiPageWikiLink Q7145034.
- Q1477744 wikiPageWikiLink Q864377.
- Q1477744 wikiPageWikiLink Q920796.
- Q1477744 comment "In mathematics, an unordered pair or pair set is a set of the form {a, b}, i.e. a set having two elements a and b with no particular relation between them. In contrast, an ordered pair (a, b) has a as its first element and b as its second element.".
- Q1477744 label "Unordered pair".