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Kamala Harris is known to love Venn diagrams and would be cringing hard at this.

For reference, circles in Venn (Euler) diagrams are sets of objects with a certain property. Select objects are shown inside or outside of each circle depending on whether they belong to the set.
A good example is xkcd 2962:
Hard to imagine political rhetoric more microtargeted at me than 'I love Venn diagrams. I really do, I love Venn diagrams. It's just something about those three circles.'

  • @[email protected]
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    1 month ago

    You have two strings and in the overlap you have the concatenated string formed from the parts. Again, not useful but a totally valid interpretation.

    So … can you actually explain why you think it is incorrect or is snarky comments all you got?

    • @[email protected]OP
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      1 month ago

      That picture does not make it clear that the labels refer to regions, not elements. A clearer explanation of set operators is the following:

      Set worksheet

      1. B (Set B)
      2. A ∪ B (Union of A and B)
      3. A (Set A)
      4. A \ B (A minus B; notation varies)
      5. B \ A (B minus A)
      6. A ∩ B (Intersection of A and B)
    • @ccunning
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      41 month ago

      This article on Intersection might help you understand

      Here are the basics, though:

      The intersection of {isplaystyle A}and {isplaystyle B} is the set {isplaystyle Aap B} of elements that lie in both set {isplaystyle A} and set {isplaystyle B}

    • Carighan Maconar
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      11 month ago

      What relation function matches your interpretation?

      Since you’re the Venn diagram expert now…