Q/ The representative system of this relation?
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Can you help me to know the representative system of this relation?
I have this relation:
$x, y in mathbb{R}$ and $x sim y iff x - yin mathbb{R}.$
And I know that it is an equivalence relation because it is reflexive, symmetric, and transitive
equivalence-relations
New contributor
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up vote
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down vote
favorite
Can you help me to know the representative system of this relation?
I have this relation:
$x, y in mathbb{R}$ and $x sim y iff x - yin mathbb{R}.$
And I know that it is an equivalence relation because it is reflexive, symmetric, and transitive
equivalence-relations
New contributor
Welcome to math.SE. Please edit the question to include our own work/thoughts, if you don't it will likely be closed.
– Henrik
Nov 12 at 16:28
Do you mean $x, y in mathbb R$?
– amWhy
Nov 12 at 19:42
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
Can you help me to know the representative system of this relation?
I have this relation:
$x, y in mathbb{R}$ and $x sim y iff x - yin mathbb{R}.$
And I know that it is an equivalence relation because it is reflexive, symmetric, and transitive
equivalence-relations
New contributor
Can you help me to know the representative system of this relation?
I have this relation:
$x, y in mathbb{R}$ and $x sim y iff x - yin mathbb{R}.$
And I know that it is an equivalence relation because it is reflexive, symmetric, and transitive
equivalence-relations
equivalence-relations
New contributor
New contributor
edited Nov 12 at 19:44
amWhy
191k27223437
191k27223437
New contributor
asked Nov 12 at 16:24
ainaneira team
12
12
New contributor
New contributor
Welcome to math.SE. Please edit the question to include our own work/thoughts, if you don't it will likely be closed.
– Henrik
Nov 12 at 16:28
Do you mean $x, y in mathbb R$?
– amWhy
Nov 12 at 19:42
add a comment |
Welcome to math.SE. Please edit the question to include our own work/thoughts, if you don't it will likely be closed.
– Henrik
Nov 12 at 16:28
Do you mean $x, y in mathbb R$?
– amWhy
Nov 12 at 19:42
Welcome to math.SE. Please edit the question to include our own work/thoughts, if you don't it will likely be closed.
– Henrik
Nov 12 at 16:28
Welcome to math.SE. Please edit the question to include our own work/thoughts, if you don't it will likely be closed.
– Henrik
Nov 12 at 16:28
Do you mean $x, y in mathbb R$?
– amWhy
Nov 12 at 19:42
Do you mean $x, y in mathbb R$?
– amWhy
Nov 12 at 19:42
add a comment |
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ainaneira team is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
ainaneira team is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
ainaneira team is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
ainaneira team is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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Welcome to math.SE. Please edit the question to include our own work/thoughts, if you don't it will likely be closed.
– Henrik
Nov 12 at 16:28
Do you mean $x, y in mathbb R$?
– amWhy
Nov 12 at 19:42