Certain types of objects from other areas of mathematics are equivalent to families of sets, in that they can be described purely as a collection of sets of objects of some type: • A
hypergraph, also called a set system, is formed by a set of
vertices together with another set of
hyperedges, each of which may be an arbitrary set. The hyperedges of a hypergraph form a family of sets, and any family of sets can be interpreted as a hypergraph that has the union of the sets as its vertices. • An
abstract simplicial complex is a combinatorial abstraction of the notion of a
simplicial complex, a shape formed by unions of line segments, triangles, tetrahedra, and higher-dimensional
simplices, joined face to face. In an abstract simplicial complex, each simplex is represented simply as the set of its vertices. Any family of finite sets without repetitions in which the subsets of any set in the family also belong to the family forms an abstract simplicial complex. • An
incidence structure consists of a set of
points, a set of
lines, and an (arbitrary)
binary relation, called the
incidence relation, specifying which points belong to which lines. An incidence structure can be specified by a family of sets (even if two distinct lines contain the same set of points), the sets of points belonging to each line, and any family of sets can be interpreted as an incidence structure in this way. • A binary
block code consists of a set of codewords, each of which is a
string of 0s and 1s, all the same length. When each pair of codewords has large
Hamming distance, it can be used as an
error-correcting code. A block code can also be described as a family of sets, by describing each codeword as the set of positions at which it contains a 1. • A
topological space consists of a pair (X, \tau) where X is a set (whose elements are called
points) and \tau is a on , which is a family of sets (whose elements are called
open sets) over X that contains both the
empty set \varnothing and X itself, and is closed under arbitrary set unions and finite set intersections.
Covers and topologies A family of sets is said to a set X if every point of X belongs to some member of the family. A subfamily of a cover of X that is also a cover of X is called a . A family is called a if every point of X lies in only finitely many members of the family. If every point of a cover lies in exactly one member of X, the cover is a
partition of . When X is a
topological space, a cover whose members are all
open sets is called an . A family is called if each point in the space has a
neighborhood that intersects only finitely many members of the family. A or is a family that is the union of countably many locally finite families. A cover \mathcal{F} is said to another (coarser) cover \mathcal{C} if every member of \mathcal{F} is contained in some member of . A is a particular type of refinement. ==Special types of set families==