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Sets; is (A∩B)∪C the same as A∩(B∪C)?

Mathematics Asked by user839131 on February 8, 2021

So I have this homework question, asking to prove (A∩B)∪C= (A∪C)∩(B∪C) , but that doesn’t make sense to me. Shouldn’t it be A∩(B∪C)= (A∪C)∩(B∪C) ?
When I check in the professors notes, that’s also what it says, but I’m not sure (I’m very new to maths).
Thank you in advance for any help!

One Answer

Absolutely not! There are a lot of small cases which would make this claim false, such as the suggestion by Randy Marsh:

$$ A = emptyset, C = { text{Your Choice} }$$ And knowing these facts $$ A cap emptyset = emptyset \ A cup emptyset = A$$

You would get that:

$$ ( emptyset cap B) cup C = emptyset cup C = C \ text{While:} \ A cap (B cup C) = emptyset cap (B cup C) = emptyset $$

And those are really different... Here is a link that might help: Prove $ (A cup B) cap C$ = $(A cap C) cup (B cap C) $

Answered by WATER on February 8, 2021

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