Some days ago I've seen Cantor's diagonal argument, and it presented a table similar to the following one:
$$\begin{matrix} {\frac{1}{1}}&{\frac{1}{2}}&{\frac{1}{3}}&{\frac{1}{4}}&{\cdots}\\ {\frac{2}{1}}&{\frac{2}{2}}&{\frac{2}{3}}&{\frac{2}{4}}&{\cdots}\\ {\frac{3}{1}}&{\frac{3}{2}}&{\frac{3}{3}}&{\frac{3}{4}}&{\cdots}\\ {\vdots}&{\vdots}&{\vdots}&{\vdots}&{\ddots} \end{matrix}$$
If we follow some diagonals, we're going to meet repeated numbers such as $1/1,\; 2/2,\; \cdots$ so what are the conditions to find only non repeated numbers? I had a feeling that the set for such a task is the following one:
$$\{0,1\}\cup \{a/b: \, a,b\in\mathbb{Z}, \;b\neq 0, \; b \in primes, \; a\neq b \}\tag{1.0}$$
The first idea I had was only for the positive rationals:
$$\{0,1\}\cup \{a/b: \, a,b\in\mathbb{N}, \;b\neq 0, \; b \in primes, \; a\neq b \}\tag{1.1}$$
But I'm really not sure of what I'm doing nor have I the mental tools to prove that, I just had a feeling. I was quite certain (with some magical mystery in my head) that $(1.1)$ was right, but I extended it also to negative rationals in $(1.0)$ and I'm a little less certain that it would work for this specific case.
I just dropped some tags which I believe that are related somehow, but I'm not sure of what tags would be adequate, if you know it, please edit.