Resources used to make predictions

Topics

These are the topics that Evgeny explicitly stated would be on the midterm paper.

Past Papers

Note: These are for the final exams, hence are twice as long as the mid-term papers - take this into account when testing the time taken to complete the exam(s).

Relevant questions are summarised here: Proof Exam Question Breakdowns.

2021

QuestionTopicMarks
1aSimul. inequalities, interval solution8
1bProve an equivalence, visual classes9
1cState and prove a theorem ON LIMITS8
2ai/iiCreate truth tables, categorise taut./contr.4 x2
2biDefinition ON LIMITS4
2biiProve a given statement ON LIMITS5
2cUse Cantor’s diagonalisation to prove by contradiction that a set is uncountable8
3aProve by induction for a sequence 8
3bSimplify an expression using set operation prop.8
3ci/ii/iiiDetermine if a mapping is injective/surjective3 x3
4aProve by induction for an inequality 8
4biProve R is an order relation5
4biiDepict a relation as a subset on the diagram of a Cartesian product4
4cDemonstrate that two sets have the same cardinality with a bijective mapping8

2022

QuestionTopicMarks
1aSimul. inequalities, interval solution8
1bProve an equivalence, visual classes9
1cState and prove a theorem ON LIMITS8
2ai/iiCreate truth tables, categorise taut./contr.4 x2
2biDefinition ON LIMITS4
2biiProve a given statement ON LIMITS5
2cUse Cantor’s diagonalisation to prove by contradiction that a set is uncountable8
3aProve by induction for a sequence 8
3bSimplify an expression using set operation prop.8
3ci/ii/iiiDetermine if a mapping is injective/surjective3 x3
4aProve by induction for an inequality 8
4bProve by contradiction that (a number is irrational)8
4cDemonstrate that two sets have the same cardinality with a bijective mapping8

2023

QuestionTopicMarks
1aUse induction to prove an inequality 8
1bSimul. inequalities, interval solution8
1ciProve an equivalence relation3
1ciiDepict relation as a subset of 3
1ciiiList elements of corresponding equivalence class3
2aUse induction to prove divisbility8
2bi/iiTruth tables to find tauts/contras4 x2
2cLimits stuff9
3aUse induction to prove sequence 8
3bi/ii/iiiDetermine if mappings are injective/surjective8 (/3)
3cProve by contradiction that (a number is irrational)9
4aUse set operation properties to simplify8
4bi/ii/iiiEvaluate logical statements to true or false8 (/3)
4cLimits stuff

In-Class Material

Practical Worksheets

Summarised Questions

Note: includes tutorial and practical questions, but not past papers.

… (irrelevant questions)

  1. Use a diagram to prove the property .

  2. Let be the set of all integers from 1 to 100. Let be a relation on (the set of all subsets of ) defined as if . Determine if is…

    1. …transitive,
    2. …reflexive,
    3. …symmetric,
    4. …antisymmetric, and in each case giving a proof if yes, or a counterexample if not. Hence state whether is an order, or an equivalence, or neither.
  3. On the set , consider the relation defined as if (that is, divides ). Draw the diagram as a subset of .

  4. Let be a relation on the set defined by if .

    1. Show that is an equivalence.
    2. What is the equivalence class of with respect to this equivalence ?
  5. Consider the order relation on defined by divisibility: (when for ). What are the infimum and supremum of the set ? Does this set have the greatest element? What about the smallest element?

  6. Consider the lexicographical order on , which means that by definition if either (while and can be any), or and .

    1. Find the supremum (least upper bound), if it exists, with respect to of the set (the disc of radius with centre at the origin, including the unit circle).
    2. Find the supremum (least upper bound), if it exists, with respect to of the set (the disc of radius with centre at the origin, without the boundary unit circle).
  7. On the set , consider the relation defined as if . Show that is an equivalence. Describe the equivalence class of with respect to this equivalence .

  8. Give an example of finite sets such that . Hint: try small sets, say, subsets of .

  9. For a fixed set , consider (set of all subsets of ) ordered by inclusion. For , what is with respect to this order? What is ?

  10. How to tie a goat so as it can eat grass exactly within a square? It is allowed to use several leashes, with several pegs. For example, one peg and leash mean that the goat eats within a circle. It is also allowed to string one rope tightly between two pegs, and to tie the goat with leash to as small ring sliding on the first rope. *Hint: use intersections of sets.

  11. For which of the following pairs does the relation define a mapping ? Give reasons to your answers:

    1. .
    2. .
    3. .
  12. Given the following mappings, determine which of the composites is defined, and write the resulting mapping in standard form:

  1. For each of the following mappings, determine whether it is injective and/or surjective:

    1. .
    2. .
    3. .
  2. Let be the set of all subsets of and let . Draw the diagram of the Cartesian product and indicate as a subset of . What is the image of ?

  3. Find the image of the mapping .

  4. Show that is a bijection and find the inverse mapping - indicating its domain and image.

  5. Let . Define recursively the mappings and for all . Compute several first mappings, conjecture an expression for , and prove it by induction.

  6. Draw the mapping on the plane defined by the rule following rule - is it injective, surjective?

  1. For the following mapping, what is the image of ? What is the full inverse image ?
  1. Given any mapping , prove that the relation on defined by if is an equivalence relation. What are the equivalence classes?

  2. Prove that the following sets have the same cardinality by producing explicitly a bijection between the sets and describing this bijection…

    1. … by a formula for ;
    2. … by representing the set on the right as a sequence: ;
    3. … by any method: ;
    4. … by using a sequence of points: ;
    5. … geometrically: .
  3. Use this theorem to prove that .

  4. Let be the set of all sequences of the form , where every is either or . Use Cantor’s “diagonal method” to prove that the set is not countable.

  5. Recall that consists of triples of s and s, and is the set of all subsets of . Consider the following mapping, in which a subset is mapped to a string of length consisting of s and s depending on which of the elements belong to (with indicating yes and indicating no). Write the images , , . Is a bijection?

  1. Use this theorem to show that any set consisting of pairwise disjoint intervals of the real line (each of ) is countable.

  2. How does the graph of the function change under the following transformations (where is a constant)? That is, how to obtain the graph of from the graph of , where…

    1. ;
    2. ;
    3. .
  3. Assume the mapping , , is a bijection. Apply transformations from the previous question to the mapping to produce a bijection .

  4. Prove that the set of all finite sequences (‘words) composed of two letters is countable.

  5. Translate the following statements between logical formulae and plain statements, given that…

1. There is a rainbow only if it is raining but the sun is shining.
2. There is no rainbow although it is raining and the sun is shining.
3. $(\neg B\land R)\implies \neg S$.
4. $S\lor (R\land B)$.

54. Use truth tables to prove the logical equivalences… 1. . 2. .

  1. Use the properties of logical operations to simplify the expression .

  2. Prove by contradiction:

    1. if is an integer such that is not divisible by , then is not divisible by .
    2. .
  3. Use the Cantor-Bernstein-Schroder theorem to show that by producing injective mappings and , where is the square and is the disc .

Slides

Summarised Notes

To be written - base on the given answers to give mock answers for every type of question that could be ask, providing all theorems that are required, and offer set methods/layouts for solving the questions.