Question 1182919
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I have been struggling with this problem for a few days now:
Let
U = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10}
A = {1, 2, 4, 6}
B = {3, 7}
C = {1, 3, 6, 7, 9}
List all the members of the following set.
A ∩ (B ∪ C)

The class I am taking has no textbooks to reference, so I have been trying to figure this out on my own. I found a similar question with a similar set (where the places of A and C were swapped in the set) on this website, and so I tried the solution and got this as my final answer:
3,6,7
The solution basically suggested that you combine the numbers and drop all duplicates (the solution I followed ignores all members of U and only used A, B, and C members).
The answer, however, is incorrect.
I am stumped and would appreciate any tips. Thank you!
So
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<pre>
The symbol  B U C  denotes the UNION of two subsets B and C of the universal set U.

The union is the list of all elements belonging to B or C; if some element does belong to both B and C,
we list it ONLY ONCE in the union.


So, the union (B U C) is this set  {1, 3, 6, 7, 9}.



NEXT, we take the INTERSECTION  A ∩ (B ∪ C).

This intersection is the subset, containing elements, common to A and to (B U C).

We list each common element ONLY ONE TIME in the intersection.


So, the intersection is

    A ∩ (B ∪ C) = {1, 6}.


<U>ANSWER</U>.  A ∩ (B ∪ C) = {1, 6}.
</pre>

Solved, answered and carefully explained.