in a previous question, I mistakenly attempted to subtract one cardinal number from another. Anyway, this got me to thinking, suppose I have two sets $X$ and $Y$, with $Y\subseteq X$. Suppose also that $|X|=|Y|=|X-Y|=\kappa$ for some cardinal number $\kappa$. Does there exist some bijection $f\colon X\to X$ such that $Y$ consists of all fixed points of $f$?
I thought the easiest example comes from working with countable sets. If $X=\mathbb{Z}$ and $Y$ is the set of even integers, then we could take $f$ to be $$ f(x)=\begin{cases} x, &\text{if }x\text{ is even} \\ x+2, &\text{if }x\text{ is odd} \\ \end{cases} $$
Of course, we could do the same thing with the set of odds. I wasn't able to think of any more examples.
But I'm curious, is it possible to do this in the more general sense, for any sets where $|X|=|Y|=|X-Y|=\kappa$, and $Y\subseteq X$? That is, can we prove there exists a bijection on $X$ such that $Y=\{x\in X\ |\ f(x)=x\}$? After thinking about it, I suppose it suffices to find a derangement $g$ (I hope I'm using that term correctly, I've only seen it used in combinatorics on finite sets) on $X-Y$, and then we could let $f=g\cup id|_Y$. Thanks!
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) instead of $k$, and specify it is infinite (though of course, the only other possibility is $|X|=|Y|=|X-Y|=0$... (-: ) – Arturo Magidin Apr 02 '11 at 02:53\text
arguments; that's what confused the renderer. See the edit for the fix. – Arturo Magidin Apr 02 '11 at 02:54