How is a = &#x2212;<!-- − --> b symmetric? R 3 = <mrow class="MJX-TeXAtom-ORD">

boloman0z

boloman0z

Answered question

2022-06-15

How is a = b symmetric?
R 3 = ( a , b ) | a = b or a = b is a relation on set of integers
Which of the following pairs does R3 contains?
( 1 , 1 ) , ( 1 , 2 ) , ( 2 , 1 ) , ( 1 , 1 ) , ( 2 , 2 )
I know that (1,1) , (2,2) and (1, -1) are in R3. The thing is: The book says it's a symmetric relation. I know that that for each pair (a,b), if it's symmetric, (b,a) must be in the relation, so (1,1) and (2,2) are fine. I'm just struggling to find out why (1, -1) does so, because I guess that (-1,1) and (1, -1) are different.
If someone could explain me this I'd be thankfull.

Answer & Explanation

Lisbonaid

Lisbonaid

Beginner2022-06-16Added 22 answers

Step 1
Look at the condition a = b. This conditions can be easily transformed into the symmetric condition b = a by multiplying both sides with -1. So in fact a = b b = a
From this you can easily deduce that your relation is symmetric.
Step 2
In your example: (-1,1) is clearly in the relation, as 1 = ( 1 ). But a relation R being symmetric just means that if aRb then also bRa. This does not mean a = b, as you seem to imply in your question.

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