A multiset is like a bag that can hold multiple copies of the same item.
Imagine you have a bag of candy. In a normal bag, each piece of candy is unique, one red gummy bear, one blue lollipop, and so on. But in a multiset, you might have multiple of the same kind. Like having five red gummy bears in your bag. You can still count them all as part of the same group.
Think of it like a toy box
If your toy box has 3 cars, 2 blocks, and 1 teddy bear, that's just a regular set. But if you have multiple of the same toy, like 3 red cars, 3 blue cars, and 2 blocks, then you're dealing with a multiset.
In math, it’s like counting how many times something shows up, instead of just saying “it's there.” So when you count your toys, you say: “I have two copies of the red car”, that’s what makes it a multiset.
Examples
- A multiset is like a fruit basket where you can have multiple apples, not just one or none.
- A playlist with repeated songs is a kind of multiset.
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See also
- What are inaccessible cardinals?
- What Is Infinity — And Why Does It Come In Different Sizes?
- What is bijection?
- Why Do Infinity and Infinity Not Always Add Up?
- Why Do Infinity and Half-Infinity Feel the Same?