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×E

×E is a notation used in mathematics to indicate the Cartesian product with a set E. It is not a standalone constant or a single operation by itself. When paired with a set A, the expression A × E denotes the set of all ordered pairs (a, e) where a ∈ A and e ∈ E. The symbol × is read “times” or “cross,” and in this context it identifies a product of sets rather than the multiplication of elements.

This notation should not be confused with the vector cross product, which also uses the × symbol

If A and E are finite, the size of their Cartesian product is the product of their

In practice, A × E is often used whenever a structured pairing of elements from two groups,

but
denotes
a
different
operation
defined
on
vectors
in
three-dimensional
space,
with
properties
such
as
bilinearity
and
a
magnitude
related
to
the
parallelogram
spanned
by
the
vectors.
The
Cartesian
product
forms
a
new
set;
it
does
not
operate
on
elements
of
A
or
E.
sizes:
|A
×
E|
=
|A|
·
|E|.
Beyond
basic
set
theory,
A
×
E
is
fundamental
in
defining
product
spaces
in
topology
and
in
constructing
product
measures
or
product
types
in
computer
science
and
data
modeling.
It
is
versatile
for
expressing
combinations
of
elements
from
two
domains
while
preserving
the
order
of
the
pair.
spaces,
or
data
domains
is
required,
with
E
frequently
singled
out
as
a
fixed
or
distinguished
component.