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Family


The formal term used for a collection of objects. It is denoted {a_i}_(i in I) (but other kinds of brackets can be used as well), where I is a nonempty set called the index set, and a_i is called the term of index i of the family.

A family with index set N is called a sequence.

The union and the intersection of a family of sets {A_i}_(i in I) are denoted

  union _(i in I)A_i     and      intersection _(i in I)A_i,
(1)

respectively.

If all terms a_i belong to an additive monoid, one can consider the sum

 sum_(i in I)a_i,
(2)

provided the number of nonzero terms is finite, i.e., the so-called support of the family

 {i in I|a_i!=0}
(3)

is a finite set. A similar argument applies to multiplicative monoids, and to the product

 product_(i in I)a_i
(4)

up to replacement of the zero element with the identity element 1.

According to its formal definition (Bourbaki 1970), if the terms a_i belong to the set X, the family {a_i}_(i in I) is a map f:I->X, where a_i=f(i) for all i in I.

Every set X gives rise to a family

 f:X->X,f(x)=x,
(5)

from which the original set can be recovered as the range of f. Accordingly, every family f:I->X,f(i)=a_i also gives rise to a set

 X={a_i|i in I},
(6)

from which, however, the original family in general cannot be recovered.


See also

Family of Curves, Index, Index Set, Set

This entry contributed by Margherita Barile

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References

Bourbaki, N. Eléments de Mathématiques. Théorie des Ensembles. Paris, France: Hermann, p. ER11, 1970.

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Family

Cite this as:

Barile, Margherita. "Family." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource, created by Eric W. Weisstein. https://mathworld.wolfram.com/Family.html

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