setsrather
Setsrather is a set-theoretic operation defined on two sets A and B within a common universe. For A and B, setsrather(A,B) yields the subset of elements that belong to A but not to B; equivalently, setsrather(A,B) equals A \ B. In this sense, the term emphasizes a comparative or preferential filtering of A against B. The naming is a neologism intended to provide an intuitive phrasing for the standard difference operation, and it is not an established term in formal mathematics.
Properties of setsrather mirror those of set difference. It is not commutative, since setsrather(A,B) generally differs
Examples help clarify the idea. If A = {1,2,3,4} and B = {3,4,5}, then setsrather(A,B) = {1,2}. If B
Applications of setsrather include data analysis to identify dataset-unique elements, access-control modeling to derive permissions present