If one, take away it's opposite; twice as many.
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If one, take away it's opposite; twice as many.
What, pray tell, is that susposed to mean?
Zero times zero ate infinity.
Oh god.
Not another lamer.....
ok if u take 1 as something then its opposite would be nothing which is 0Quote:
If one, take away it's opposite; twice as many.
then 1-0=1 not as you said 2 (twice as many)
Am assuming you mean zero times zero is infinity not ate :)Quote:
Zero times zero ate infinity
but am afraid 0x0=0
nothing multiplied by nothing is still nothing ;)
v_Ln
half full = half empty
therefor empty = full i read that somewhere and it stuck lol
ohh well
its funny and makes u think a little bit
cya
RiOtEr
Is he meaning one, minus its opposite (negative one), gets two? That's all I can think of to have it make sense, 1 -- 1 = 2, because taking away a negative is the same as adding the positive (1 + 1 = 2)...
On of my teachers says 'well, it depends on how u look at it...' Normally this is talking about a test or something, you can say you got half the answers wrong, or half of them right... Oh, well......
-Tim_axe
put 0 on top of 0.
you get an 8
turn it on its side
what do you get?
Here's somethign to think about.
X^0=1, for all values of X
so => 0^0 = 1.. but it isn't.. any1 care to explain why, coz it has me flummoxed
Those late night drinking/thinking sessions are really not a good idea...
Flibberdy
A nice pair of ASCII glasses? ;)Quote:
Originally posted here by SarinMage
put 0 on top of 0.
you get an 8
turn it on its side
what do you get?
Seriously though, it'd be the symbol for infinity.
Here's a good question: What's the value of 22/7?
good job. therefore 0+0=Infinite
22/7 is used by lazy students who aren't capable of remembering 3.14159265358979.... (Pi, that is).... 22/7 is close enough, but it ain't the real thing ;)Quote:
Originally posted by chsh
Here's a good question: What's the value of 22/7?
LOL! Good answer!Quote:
Originally posted here by Negative
22/7 is used by lazy students who aren't capable of remembering 3.14159265358979.... (Pi, that is).... 22/7 is close enough, but it ain't the real thing ;)
22/7=3.1428571428571428571428571428571
pi=3.141592653589793238462643383279, get more at http://users.pandora.be/gotte/Coolstuff/pi.htm .
Other nice math related pages:
Big Numbers: http://www.ecstaticfuturist.com/MiscInfo/numbers.html (did you know that 10^111 is called sextrigintillion?-)
The Prime Pages: http://www.utm.edu/research/primes/ (7919 is the prime number #1000)
The 27 Conspiracy: http://www.lbstone.com/27/ (I don't know what to think about this...)
I thought Pi was incalculable? If you want to use it and use it in all its irrational number-ness you have to go via 22/7 rather than 3.14...Because the latter is only a tiny part of Pi's value,
Are they still logging the value of Pi somewhere?
hindsight
I thought Pi was incalculable? If you want to use it and use it in all its irrational number-ness you have to go via 22/7 rather than 3.14...Because the latter is only a tiny part of Pi's value,
Are they still logging the value of Pi somewhere?
hindsight
22/7 is not even near pi, so using that one isn't such a good idea ;)Quote:
From http://www.joyofpi.com/pifacts.htm
A number, represented by said letter, expressing the ratio of the circumference of a perfect circle to its diameter. The value of pi has been calculated to many millions of decimal places, to no readily apparent purpose: no perfect circles or spheres exist in nature, since matter is composed of atoms and therefore lumpy, not smooth. Nature
herself sometimes takes to rounding off the more extreme decimals of numbers when they get sufficiently small, as Prof. Heisenberg has pointed out. However, the continued extension of pi provides a harmless exercise of computer power which would otherwise be misused playing Quake or surfing pointless web sites.
You can find the current record here and here's the box they used for it...
22/7 is not even near pi, so using that one isn't such a good idea ;)Quote:
From http://www.joyofpi.com/pifacts.htm
A number, represented by said letter, expressing the ratio of the circumference of a perfect circle to its diameter. The value of pi has been calculated to many millions of decimal places, to no readily apparent purpose: no perfect circles or spheres exist in nature, since matter is composed of atoms and therefore lumpy, not smooth. Nature
herself sometimes takes to rounding off the more extreme decimals of numbers when they get sufficiently small, as Prof. Heisenberg has pointed out. However, the continued extension of pi provides a harmless exercise of computer power which would otherwise be misused playing Quake or surfing pointless web sites.
You can find the current record here and here's the box they used for it...
the rule is "x^0 = 1 for every value of X excluding 0"Quote:
Originally posted here by Flibberdy
Here's somethign to think about.
X^0=1, for all values of X
so => 0^0 = 1.. but it isn't.. any1 care to explain why, coz it has me flummoxed
Those late night drinking/thinking sessions are really not a good idea...
Flibberdy
0^0 is like saying 0/0...its undefined.
Here's something I posted a while ago about division by zero...
Division by zero indeed is undefined, and it should stay that way.
Why? Because if you allow a 'Divide by Zero', you'll get things like this:
There you go: 2 = 1Code:Premisse: a = b
1. a²=ab
Because a = b
2. a² + a² = a² + ab
Add a²
3. 2a² = a² + ab
x + x = 2x
4. 2a² - 2ab = a² + ab - 2ab
Add -2ab
5. 2a² - 2ab = a² - ab
xy - 2xy = -xy
6. 2(a² - ab) = 1(a² - ab)
Single out the factors
7. {2(a² - ab)} / {a² - ab} = {1(a² - ab)} / {a² - ab}
I'll get to this one in a few...
2 = 1
A practical example:
Steps 1 - 6 are correct, but step 7 is why x / 0 should be undefined:Code:Premise: a=2 and b=2
1. 2² = 2 x 2
2. 4 + 4 = 4 + 4
3. 2 x 4 = 4 + 4
4. 2 x 4 - 8 = 4 + 4 - 8
5. 2 x 4 - 2 x 4 = 4 - 4
6. 2(4 - 4) = 1(4 - 4)
Code:2 / (4 - 4) = 1 / (4 - 4)
Negative - that is quite the signature.
That's what I sort of tried to make clear in my message...Quote:
22/7 is not even near pi, so using that one isn't such a good idea ;)
Hindsight: Yes, it is "incalculable", eg. endless eg. irrational. It cannot be expressed in any "r/q" way (so not 22/7 ;)) where r and q both belong to rational numbers. But you can always count more decimals for it. Try PiFast, http://numbers.computation.free.fr/C...am/pifast.html . It's widely used to measure the speed of the CPU, especially within the overclocking people. It calculates the first 5.000.000 decimals and gives you the time the job took (AMD Athlon XP 1900+ some 30 sec).
And if you read my previous message carefully, you'll find the link to a page which contains the first 100.000 decimals. ;)
Neg, you should have left the answer for "division by zero -> 1=2" as a hidden message, although I've read that a couple of times before. But other people might not have seen it before. :)
There is a far easier way to prove that 1 = 2, Negative (although this works on the same principle):
Assume: x=y
2x=2y
x-y=0
2x-2y=0
Therefore:
x-y=2x-2y
Factorise:
1(x-y)=2(x-y)
Divide by (x-y)
1 = 2
Of course this doesn't work because x-y=0 and you can't divide by zero without getting infinity or nonsense.
Just for thought:
What is 0/0 equal to? Answer, anything you want.
Assume 0/0 = 5 then multiply both sides by 0 you get 0=0
Assume 0/0 = 200 then multiply both sides by 0 you get 0=0
etc.
By Definition 22/7 isn't irrational.. an Irrational umber being defined as one which cannot be written as a fraction comprising of 2 integers.. If u want Pi in it's full magnificence then a Calculator's Pi button should suffice
6. 2(a² - ab) = 1(a² - ab)
Single out the factors
2a(a - b) = a(a - b)
there are many better ways to simplify
:o
and ofcourse 1 = 2 if a = b, or x = y...
it's like saying an apple's an orange, so deleware's in kansas
:rolleyes:
interesting
since we are all into maths ...
here is a cool one:
imagine an inifinite decreasing curve bounded by an horizonal asymptot having a precise are ...? possible or no ....