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1 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac Lecture 04: SETS AND FUNCTIONS 1.6, 1.7, 1.8 Jarek Rossignac CS1050: Understanding and Constructing Proofs Spring 2006
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2 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac Lecture Objectives Sets, specification, notation, construction Power sets, ordered pairs, relations Operations on sets and pointsets Functions and composition
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3 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What is a set? Unordered collection of elements (members) A set contains its members We may define a set by listing its elements S = {a,b,c} S={1,2,3…} or by a property (set builder notation) S = {a: a Z ( k Z a=2k+1) } S = {x : x is a positive integer less than 200 and divisible by 3}
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4 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What are the important sets of numbers? R = {real numbers} Q = {p/q : p Z, q Z, q≠0} Z = {… –1, 0, 1, ….} integers N = {0,1,2….} natural numbers Z + = {1,2,3 ….} positive integers
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5 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac When are two sets equal? When they have the same elements {a,b,c} = {a,c,b} = {a,b,c,b,b}
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6 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What is a Venn diagram? Graphic depiction of (topological) set relationship Z+Z+Z+Z+ N Z Q R 0
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7 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What operators/notation are used for sets? Sets in upper case. Elements in lower case. s Ss is an element of S. s Ss is not in S |S|number of elements (cardinality) of a finite set S S=TS equals T (equality) S elements not in S (complement) S Telements in S and T (intersection) S Telements in S or T (union) S–T = S T, elements of S that are not in T (difference) S T S T – S T (symmetric difference) S TS included in or equal to T (inclusion) S TS included in (but not equal to) T ( proper inclusion) empty (i.e. null) set, also denoted {}. Different from { }
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8 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What are the subsets of a set S? All sets whose elements are all in S This always includes: The empty set, , since S The whole set, S, since S S
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9 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What is the power set of set S? The power set P(S) of set S is the set of all subsets of S. P({a,b}) = { , {a},{b},{a,b}}
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10 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What is the power set of ? P( ) = { } Remember that is a set, not an element
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11 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What is the power set of { }? P({ }) = { , { } } Remember that { } has one element, which is a set Hence its power set will contain two elements: the empty set the set itself { }
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12 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What is an ordered n-tuple? The ordered n-tuple (a,b,c) is the ordered list of elements: a, b, c Two n-tuples are equal, (a,b,c) = (d,e,f), when corresponding elements are equal, (a=d, b=e, c=f).
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13 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What is an ordered pair? An n-tuple of two elements For example, The (x,y) coordinates of a point in the plane The vertices (a,b) of an oriented edge or link in the graph
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14 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What is the Cartesian product of two sets? A B = {(a,b): a A, b B} set of ordered pairs (a,b) such that a is an element of A and b is an element of B {a,b} {c,d} = {(a,c), (a,d), (b,c), (b,d) } Note that in general, A B ≠B A
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15 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac How to use quantifiers with sets? s S means for all s in S s S means there exists an element s in S !s S means there exists a single element s in S
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16 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What are unions and intersections of sets? Union: S T = {u : u S u T} Intersection: S T = {u : u S u T} S T STSTSTST
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17 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What are the differences of sets? Complement: S = {u : u S}, also denoted !S Implicitly defined in a universal set U as S = U–S Difference: S–T = S T = {u : u S u T} Symmetric difference: S T = (S–T) (T–S) S T S – T SS S T
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18 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac Individual exercise Prove that (S T) – (S T) = (S–T) (T–S)
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19 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac When are two sets disjoint? When their intersection is empty: S T = We often have to prove that two or more sets are pairwise disjoint Often it is necessary to test whether two sets are disjoint Components of a car engine do not interfere Objects do not collide in an animation
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20 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What is |S T| ? The cardinality, |S T|, is the number of elements of the union, S T, of the two finite sets S and T. |S T| = |S| + |T| – |S T| we need to subtract elements of S T, since they were counted both in |S| and in |T|.
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21 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac Identities of Boolean operators Identity: A U=A, A U=A Idempotence: A A=A, A A=A Domination: A U=U, A = Complement: A A =U, A A= Commutativity: A B=B A, A B=B A, Associativity: A (B C)=(A B) C, A (B C)=(A B) C Distributivity: A (B C)=(A B) (B C), A (B C)=(A B) (B C) !S denotes S Sand has higher priority than , , and – Complementation: !(!A)=A de Morgan: !(A B) = !A !B, !(A B) = !A !B Absorption: A (A B)=A, A (A B)=A
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22 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac Relation between sets and Booleans? Define the propositions A(u)=(u A) and B(u)=(u B). Then A B = { u U : A(u) B(u) } A B = { u U : A(u) B(u) } !A = { u U : ¬ A(u)} Hence, there is a correspondence between and (AND, &&) and (OR, ||) ! and ¬(AND NOT, &&!) and F(false) U and T(true) Translate the previous identities into logic
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23 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac Prove !(A B) = !A !B using inclusion Hint: To prove that S = T, prove that (S T) (T S) To prove that !(A B) !A !B assume that for some arbitrary x, x !(A B) hence ¬(x A x B) hence x A x B hence x !A x !B it follows that x ( !A !B) Since our choice of x !(A B) was arbitrary, x !(A B) x ( !A !B) Hence!(A B) !A !B To prove that !A !B !(A B) … prove that it follows that x !(A B)
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24 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac Prove !(A B) = !A !B using builder This time we use the set builder notation: !(A B) = {x: x A B} = {x: ¬ (x A B)} = {x: ¬ ((x A) (x B))} = {x: ¬ (x A) ¬(x B))} # de Morgan = {x: x !A x !B} = {x: x (!A !B)}
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25 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac Prove A (B C)=(A B) (A C) using cells Test one element in each cell against both expressions A B C
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26 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac Exercise Provide a concise Boolean expression for the set marked by the green cells A C B
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27 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac Prove !(A B) = !A !B using a truth table Test all combinations uAuAuBuBu !(A B)u (!A !B) ttff tfff ftff fftt
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28 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac How to represent finite sets? Consider a finite domain U={a,b,c,d….} where |U|<2 20 We can represent any subset of U by listing its elements. But working on such a representation may be expensive. A more efficient representation may be derived if we assume an ordering of the elements. For example the n-tuple (a,b,c,d…) Represent a subset S of U by a classification vector (bit string) V(S) = 0110… which indicates that a S, b S, c S, d S …
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29 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac How to perform Boolean operations on sets? Consider 2D arrays A[i][j] and B[i][j] of bits representing digitized versions of 2D sets A and B –(Pixel(i,j) A) (A[i][j] ==1)# red if 1, green if 0 –(Pixel(i,j) B) (B[i][j] ==1) How to represent and compute A B?
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30 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac How to deal with continuous pointsets? Use a constructive model: S=A (B C) Provide point/primitive classification methods A.isIn(x,y) returns true if point(x,y) A For example, if A is rect(lx,ly,hx,hy), then A.isIn(x, y) {return((lx<x)&&(x<hx)&& (ly<y)&&(y<hy));} Provide Boolean classification methods U.isIn(L,R) combines truth values L and R For example, if U is a union operator, then U.isIn(L,R) {return ( L || R );}
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31 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What is Constructive Solid Geometry? A CSG model is a binary tree representing a 3D shape –Leaves represent solid primitives (blocks, spheres, bunnies…) –Nodes represent Boolean operators ( , , –)
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32 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What is a relation from set A to set B? It is a subset of A B Think of it as links from elements of A to elements of B A relation assigns to each set of A zero or more elements of B A B
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33 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What is a function from A to B A relation assigning exactly one element of B to each element of A. Note that it may assign the same element b B to two different elements of A. We write it f : A B (here is not an implication) a A b B b=f(a) A is the domain of f A B
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34 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What is the image of S by f? b B is the image of all elements a A for which b=f(a) The image f(S) of a subset S of A is the set of the images of elements of S. A B S
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35 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What is the range of a function? The image of A. (The set of images of elements of A). A B
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36 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac When is a function injective? f is injective (“one-to-one”) when f(x)=f(y) x=y A B A B Not injective Injective
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37 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac When is a function surjective? f is surjective (“onto”) when b B a A f(a)=b A B A B Not surjective Surjective
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38 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac When is a function bijective? f is bijective when it is both injective and surjective –(“one-to-one” and “onto”) –one-to-one correspondence b B !a A f(a)=b A B A B Not bijective Bijective
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39 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What is the inverse of a function? The inverse is only defined for bijective functions The inverse f –1 of f maps each b B to a A where b=f(a) f –1 (b)=a b=f(a) A B f A B f –1
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40 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What is the composition of two functions? Let f : A B and g : B C The composition f g : A C of f and g is defined as f g(a) = f(g(a))
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41 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac Application to computer graphics Translation Rotation Composition Do rotations and translations commute? T(2,1) R(30) T(2,1)R(30) T(2,1) R(30)
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42 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What is the graph of a function? Set of ordered pairs { (a,b) : a A, b B, b=f(a) } Sometimes we can plot it –Here f maps points (x,y) on the plane into height f(x,y) = x 2 +2y 4 –1
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43 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac What are floor and ceiling? The floor x of x is the larges integer not exceeding to x The ceiling x is the smallest integer ≥ x Properties: x–1< x ≤ x ≤ x < x+1 –x =– x , –x = – x x+n = x +n, x+n = x +n Compute –0.5 and –0.5 How many bytes (8-bit strings) do you need to encode 100 bits? Prove or disprove x+y = x + y
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44 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac Quick test Let A and B be two sets What is the symmetric difference of A and B? When are A and B disjoint? How would you prove that A=B? What is the cardinality of A B? What is Constructive Solid Geometry Let f be a function from A to B What property does f have? What is the image of a subset S of A by f? When is f injective? When is the inverse of f defined? What is the floor of –3.2?
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45 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac Assigned Reading Sections 1.6, 1.7, 1.8
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46 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac Assigned Exercises (for quiz) 1.6 p 85 –18 1.7 p 95: –11, 15, 16, 21, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32,33 1.8 p 109-110 –28, 32, 35.b), 38, 40
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47 Georgia Tech, IIC, GVU, 2006 MAGIC Lab http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarekJarek Rossignac Assigned Project P1 is due Tu Jan 24 (on your PPP) Email TA only if –you did not submit P0. –you plan to have a late submission. –you changed your PPP url.
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