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milena24
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Homework Statement
I have to prove the countability of the set of all lines on the Euclidean plane passing through at least two points whose coordinates are both integers.
Homework Equations
Proofs don't have particular equations (at least that's what my book says)
The Attempt at a Solution
First thing I did was, in all honesty, try to figure out the actual basis of the Euclidean plane.
This yielded that it is the set of all ordered pairs of real numbers, with n-tuples considered vectors with n-components. This would translate to [tex]\Re^{2}[/tex]
Now my interpretation of the question is that the given about passing through at least two points with integer coordinates doesn't tell me much as it to actually be a line it would also need to pass through non-Integer coordinates, regardless of how the lines are arranged. Furthermore, I believe any line with a slope will at some point from -[tex]\infty[/tex] [tex]\infty[/tex] cross at least two points that have integer coordinates, again, excluding vertical or horizontal lines.
This makes considering [tex]\Re[/tex] [tex]\times[/tex] [tex]\Re[/tex] vs Z [tex]\times[/tex] Z a bit difficult to understand. I find it rather vague right now...
Now, if I want to prove it's not countable by trying to prove it is, I end up with trying to prove it's bijective... as it's the only thing that has been covered in class...
f: N [tex]\rightarrow[/tex] [tex]\Re^{2}[/tex], but I feel the right side is always going to grow faster, so it is unlikely to be onto, I hypothesize uncountable.
now, looking at the question, it doesn't seem to care about the points in between as long as the condition is met for it to pass through two points with integer coordinates, so is we just want to count lines, would it be valid to just take, say y = mx + b for each feasible combination, meaning I'm actually proving I can count the input-outputs of that equation?
Would that mean that given that case it would be countable because ever input x will produce a single y? This would still be uncountable in my opinion, given the case of the horizontal line not ever being one to one...I'm kinda stumped with the question, and I guess I'm too tangled up to understand what I need to do here. Please help... at least a kickstart would suffice...
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