ADVERTISEMENT

Ordered Pairs

An ordered pair is a 2-tuple formed by taking two elements (generally numbers but can be alphabets, characters, words, or symbols).

The general form of representation is (a, b) where a and b represent two distinct objects.

The important thing with ordered pairs is that the ordering of the participating elements is important i.e. (a, b) is different from (b, a) unless a=b

(a,b) ≠ (b,a) unless a=b

Examples of Ordered pairs :


(1,2)
(a,b)
(-172,45.98)
(x,3)

Remember ☞

  • (a, b) ≠ (b, a), unless a = b. 
  • If (a1, b2) = (a2, b2) ⇒ a1=a2 & b1=b2

Ordered pairs are widely used in set theory, calculus, relations, and function theories and in the representation of intervals for functions on numbers lines, and axis, for laws and theories in mathematics, physics, chemistry, biology, statistics, etc.

TAGS:

Comments

What do you think?

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Learn More

Related Posts

De Morgan’s laws

De Morgan’s laws

De Morgan’s First Law The complement of the union of two sets is equal to the intersection of their complements i.e. (A ∪ B )' = A' ∩ B' De Morgan’s Second Law The complement of the intersection of two sets is equal to the union of their complements i.e. (A ∩ B )’ =...

read more

Cartesian Product of Sets

A cartesian product between two sets is defined as the set consisting of all possible ordered pairs that can be formed by taking one element from each of the sets at a given time. If A and B are two sets such that a ∈ A and b ∈ B, then the cartesian product between A...

read more

Cartesian Product

The cartesian product of two sets A and B is defined as a set formed by all the possible ordered pairs of elements from A and B, such that the first element comes from set A and the second element comes from set B. The cartesian product is denoted as A × B....

read more
Share This