ComputationalThinking
Across
- 6. is a number greater than 1 that has only two factors, 1 and itself.
- 7. is a diagram that uses overlapping circles to represent sets and their relationships, such as intersections and unions.
- 9. is a set where all its elements belong to another set.
- 11. a well-defined collection of objects written inside curly brackets.
- 12. is the set of all elements that are in A or in B (or in both).
- 13. is a number that can be positive, negative, or zero without fractions.
- 14. is a number that can be divided exactly by 2.
Down
- 1. is the result of an integer multiplied by itself three times (n × n × n).
- 2. is a number that cannot be divided exactly by 2.
- 3. is a number that cannot be written as a fraction, and has a non-terminating, non-repeating decimal part.
- 4. is a number greater than 1 that has more than two factors.
- 5. is the set of all elements that are in A but not in B.
- 8. is the set of all elements that are common to A and B.
- 10. is the result of an integer multiplied by itself two times (n × n).
- 12. is the set that contains all possible elements for a given discussion.