Staredit Network > Forums > Lite Discussion > Topic: A question (or 2!)
A question (or 2!)
Nov 5 2011, 7:06 am
By: Sacrieur
Pages: < 1 2 3 45 >
 

Nov 8 2011, 8:54 am Symmetry Post #21

Dungeon Master

I pick 42, therefore 100%.



:voy: :jaff: :voy: :jaff:

Nov 8 2011, 11:50 am TiKels Post #22



I pick 41.999... repeating.



"If a topic that clearly interest noone needs to be closed to underline the "we don't want this here" message, is up to debate."

-NudeRaider

Nov 8 2011, 4:52 pm Sacrieur Post #23

Still Napping

Quote from TiKels
I pick 41.999... repeating.

curiously, that's the same as picking 42.



None.

Nov 8 2011, 11:07 pm TiKels Post #24



No it's not 42, it's infinitely close to 42 the same way that 1/inf isn't zero ;D



"If a topic that clearly interest noone needs to be closed to underline the "we don't want this here" message, is up to debate."

-NudeRaider

Nov 8 2011, 11:14 pm Lanthanide Post #25



41.999... is the same as 42 in the same way that 0.999... is the same as 1: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/0.999...



None.

Nov 8 2011, 11:39 pm JaFF Post #26



We just love arguing about things we're not fully educated about. ;D



None.

Nov 8 2011, 11:44 pm TiKels Post #27



To whom is this directed?



"If a topic that clearly interest noone needs to be closed to underline the "we don't want this here" message, is up to debate."

-NudeRaider

Nov 9 2011, 1:29 am Sacrieur Post #28

Still Napping

Quote from JaFF
We just love arguing about things we're not fully educated about. ;D

I'm fully educated on the matter I'm discussing. It's one the first oddities that piqued my interest in number theory.

0.999… is 1. It's simply another way of writing it; and a very bad way at that. 12/3 is a bad way of writing 4, and 0.333… is a bad way of writing 1/3. But in the end, they're all equal.



None.

Nov 9 2011, 1:30 am Vrael Post #29



Quote from JaFF
We just love arguing about things we're not fully educated about. ;D
JaFF is so nub. Assuming equal likelihood and all, clearly he was never educated about the world. :D



None.

Nov 9 2011, 1:41 am ubermctastic Post #30



OMG
.999 = 1

so
1/0 = inf
inf*0 = 1

but
41.999 = 42

so
42/0 = inf
inf*0 = 42

Therefore 1 must be equal to 42
1 = 42

So
If this is true, all numbers must be equal to 42
Which means your chance of picking 42 out of all integers or real numbers is 1/1 or 100%

Post has been edited 2 time(s), last time on Nov 9 2011, 1:47 am by K_A.



None.

Nov 9 2011, 1:46 am Sacrieur Post #31

Still Napping

Not quite :lol:

∞ × 0 is undefined =p



None.

Nov 9 2011, 2:19 am Raitaki Post #32



Quote from Sacrieur
Not quite :lol:

∞ × 0 is undefined =p
So I herd the multiplication operation works something like a * b = 0 + a + a + a + a.... with the amount of times we add a equals to b. From that we can say a * 0 = not adding a to anything at all. So then......not adding infinity to zero at all is....undefined? :hurr: :hurr: :hurr:



None.

Nov 9 2011, 2:37 am TiKels Post #33



Infinity doesn't work like normal numbers do in every case



"If a topic that clearly interest noone needs to be closed to underline the "we don't want this here" message, is up to debate."

-NudeRaider

Nov 10 2011, 9:19 am BeDazed Post #34



That is exactly why 0.999999... is 1.
3x(1/3) = (0.3333333)x3
1 = 0.999999.....



None.

Nov 11 2011, 1:36 am Vrael Post #35



Quote from Raitaki
Quote from Sacrieur
Not quite :lol:

∞ × 0 is undefined =p
So I herd the multiplication operation works something like a * b = 0 + a + a + a + a.... with the amount of times we add a equals to b. From that we can say a * 0 = not adding a to anything at all. So then......not adding infinity to zero at all is....undefined? :hurr: :hurr: :hurr:
One interesting way to look at it is to use distributivity. a(b+c) = ab + ac.
So for normal numbers, lets take some integer 7, for an easy example.
0*7
=0*(1+1+1+1+1+1+1)
=0*1 + 0*1 + 0*1 + 0*1 + 0*1 + 0*1 + 0*1
= 0+0+0+0+0+0+0
= 0
The operation is finite, terminating after 7 steps.
If we represent infinity as a sum of 1's, the same way we represented 7, it would be a non-finite sequence: 1+1+1+1+ . . . + 1 + . . .
If we try to do the same thing
0*(infinity)
=0*(1+1+1+1+ . . . + 1 + . . .)
=0*1 + 0*1 + 0*1 + 0*1 + . . . + 0*1 + . . . <- and here we run into a problem. The elipses present an unusual problem, because there are infinitely many 1's, we would have to distribute infinitely many 0's to those 1's. You could spend all of eternity distributing the 0's, but there would still be a tail of +1+1+1+1. . . to distribute the 0's to still. So for any non-zero distribution time, we still have an infinite amount of 1's remaining, so the sum would still be infinite. If you could distribute the 0's instantly, in zero time, killing every single "1" at once, the sum would be 0. Neither of these options really make a good realistic definition for the case 0*infinity, especially considering infinity isnt really a number. There are other ways to think about it I'm sure, but this one makes the most sense to me.



None.

Nov 11 2011, 2:02 am DT_Battlekruser Post #36



I always just liked to think of infinity as "so big" that even multiplying it by zero might not make it zero.



None.

Nov 11 2011, 2:09 am TiKels Post #37



The ideas of infinity and zero I tend to describe mentally not as numbers but ideas with certain constraints (but less so zero) and such. Any number times infinity is still infinity, and any number times zero is still zero. So you'd reach an infinite (like described above with the 1+1+1 thing) non concluding thing.



"If a topic that clearly interest noone needs to be closed to underline the "we don't want this here" message, is up to debate."

-NudeRaider

Nov 11 2011, 4:40 am EzTerix Post #38



Hypothetically it's impossible to correlate an integer with it's divisible factor when the square root exceeds 0 therefore it must be rooted to infinity multiple times and be rooted by a decimal 0 which could freeze the integer causing it to become a new formula.



None.

Nov 11 2011, 4:56 am Vrael Post #39



Could you put that in english? Or math notation? I maybe just got math-trolled?



None.

Nov 11 2011, 5:19 am Sacrieur Post #40

Still Napping

Quote from Vrael
Could you put that in english? Or math notation? I maybe just got math-trolled?

Math trolled, what he said doesn't actually mean anything.



None.

Options
Pages: < 1 2 3 45 >
  Back to forum
Please log in to reply to this topic or to report it.
Members in this topic: None.
[01:53 am]
Ultraviolet -- :lol:
[06:51 pm]
Vrael -- It is, and I could definitely use a company with a commitment to flexibility, quality, and customer satisfaction to provide effective solutions to dampness and humidity in my urban environment.
[06:50 pm]
NudeRaider -- Vrael
Vrael shouted: Idk, I was looking more for a dehumidifer company which maybe stands out as a beacon of relief amidst damp and unpredictable climates of bustling metropolises. Not sure Amazon qualifies
sounds like moisture control is often a pressing concern in your city
[06:50 pm]
Vrael -- Maybe here on the StarEdit Network I could look through the Forums for some Introductions to people who care about the Topics of Dehumidifiers and Carpet Cleaning?
[06:49 pm]
Vrael -- Perhaps even here I on the StarEdit Network I could look for some Introductions.
[06:48 pm]
Vrael -- On this Topic, I could definitely use some Introductions.
[06:48 pm]
Vrael -- Perhaps that utilizes cutting-edge technology and eco-friendly cleaning products?
[06:47 pm]
Vrael -- Do you know anyone with a deep understanding of the unique characteristics of your carpets, ensuring they receive the specialized care they deserve?
[06:45 pm]
NudeRaider -- Vrael
Vrael shouted: I've also recently becoming interested in Carpet Cleaning, but I'd like to find someone with a reputation for unparalleled quality and attention to detail.
beats me, but I'd make sure to pick the epitome of excellence and nothing less.
[06:41 pm]
Vrael -- It seems like I may need Introductions to multiple companies for the Topics that I care deeply about, even as early as Today, 6:03 am.
Please log in to shout.


Members Online: Roy, pinajsubi95