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12:35 AM
I've never seen a question like this: four answers, no votes on any of them.
 
 
2 hours later…
2:14 AM
@DylanMoreland I just voted to close: OP doesn't seem to care enough.
 
3:06 AM
@tb I didn't know that was one of the choices for reasons to close :-)
 
3:34 AM
Anyone here familiar with deRham cohomology? I have a simple question: How do I show the second cohomology group of the plane is trivial. All the 2-forms are closed, so how do I show they are all exact?
Thought about using Green's, but not sure how to make it work.
 
@robjohn "too localised" maybe =)
 
@Srivatsan whatever :-)
 
@robjohn :/
 
3:52 AM
@Srivatsan how has your day been? We took our son to the airport this morning.
@Srivatsan I posted my fairly complicated hint. It still has details that need to be filled in, so I think it is safe for a homework hint.
Though it may be too much. I don't know
I have reverted to my plain avatar. I had switched to the holiday avatar since Szabolcs wanted to see it
It will take a few minutes to show up here. In the meantime, I am going to get dinner.
 
5:01 AM
How hard is it to write exponents
 
Let me be more specific: Is there a way to show that on a punctured plane, every 2-form is the image of a 1-form (in the deRham cohomology)?
 
@Potato: That's not quite true. What you want to show is that every closed 2-form is the differential of a 1-form.
 
Well, all 2 forms are going to be closed, right?
 
Ah, yes. There are no 3-forms.
 
So let a general 2-form be h(x,y) dx dy and a general 1-form be f dx + g dy. We see the 1-form becomes dg/dx-df/dy dx dy, so we need to solve dg/dx-df/dy = h(x,y).
It looks like Green's theorem to me. The analogous thing in R^1 is, if we want to get the form g(x) dx, to write f = integral from 0 to x g(u) du, but I don't see how to use Green's to do that here.
 
5:14 AM
Bleh, it's a PDE problem. I never did learn how to solve those...
 
This is an interesting question. I must walk the pup, but I hope you guys come up with something!
Ordinarily I would just use homotopy invariance and never think about this.
 
Actually, couldn't we cheat and assume that it comes from something of the form f dx?
 
I guess. How does that help?
 
Then it turns into an ordinary calculus problem.
 
I don't see where you're going with this.
You want to use the fundamental theorem?
 
5:22 AM
If $h(x, y) \, \mathrm{d}x \wedge \mathrm{d}y = \mathrm{d}(f(x, y) \, \mathrm{d}x)$ then $\int h(x, y) \, \mathrm{d}y = f(x, y)$, no?
I suppose the trouble is choosing the path of integration... hmmm
 
That seems fishy though, because isn't that basically the poincare lemma, which I think has a much harder proof?
oh, this is a special case
 
OK, we justify our first assumption by the fact that our "antiderivative" is determined only up to a closed 1-form
hm, although it's not clear there is a closed 1-form of the type we want. :-/
 
 
2 hours later…
7:19 AM
If we want to show h(x,y) dx dy is exact, we can almost let g=0 and f=integral from z to x f(t,y) dt
where z is some fixed point
The only problem is that at some points, we are integrating through a point where the function is not defined....
 
8:14 AM
I'd like to make a feature request for "infinite editing of chat messages".
Good morning everyone and see you later!
 
Morning.
Executioner needed here
 
8:57 AM
@MartinSleziak Thanks Zhen!
 
QED
9:44 AM

 CURED

For feedback/discussion/requests of Close/Undelete/Reopen/Edit...
2
I created this new room
doubt it will catch on but at least I try
 
:)
Morning QED
 
QED
hello
 
10:22 AM
Good morning.
 
Hi Asaf.
 
Hey all.
 
I have chosen the working title for my thesis.
 
@AsafKaragila cool, and that is?
 
Russell's Strange Socks Drawer or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying and Love The Axiom of Choice
3
 
QED
10:24 AM
ahaha
 
Can someone check my answer to my own question here?(math.stackexchange.com/questions/97128/…) I will not be able to sleep until I figure out this stupid technical issue.
 
QED
@AsafKaragila, what do you think of chat.stackexchange.com/rooms/2165/jury-duty
 
@AsafKaragila You can give a hearty "Yee-haw!" at the end of your defense :-)
 
@QED Too much Pauly Shore.
@robjohn It is possible, yes.
 
@QED The idea is that things concerning close votes, reopening etc. will be easier to find, if they are in a single place? (As opposed to being in this chatroom hidden between many other messages.)
 
10:26 AM
I wonder how the heartless and humorless folks will take this working title...
 
@AsafKaragila you snatched that from Dr. Strangechoice aka. Francois G. Dorais.
 
QED
@MartinSleziak, yes and that if nobody is around they'll still see it later
 
I bet the final title would be something like "Consistency Results Regarding The Axiom of Choice and Vector Spaces"
@tb He was Dr. Strangechoice?
 
@AsafKaragila yes, he confirms it somewhere.
Let me look for it.
 
QED: Might be worth trying.
 
10:28 AM
@tb Interesting. I did not remember that last night when I had this in mind, though.
 
@AsafKaragila see here
@AsafKaragila I guess it's a rather obvious one if you're a Kubrick fan (as everyone should be).
 
@tb True.
I talked with Uri yesterday, he thinks that I have enough for a thesis, even if there is not enough original research for a paper afterwards. I'm starting to write, and in the meantime I hope to finish at least one nontrivial theorem.
 
Uri is Uri Abraham?
 
In this case, yes.
 
@AsafKaragila Sounds good!
 
10:35 AM
@tb So I spent last night creating the structure of the LaTeX files, and fiddle a bit with the preliminaries chapter.
 
Just keep it going. But remember what counts is the contents, not the looks -- it's too easy to waste the time with layout tweaking. You'll need to keep that for the times when you don't make progress, so that you can cheat yourself into thinking you did something. Oh, well, but at least it looks a bit better now :)
2
 
Oh, I was talking about the whole main tex files, how the chapters should be divided (sectioning too), and stuff like that.
You can see what I did before I was completely tired and what I did after... just by the names of the sections :-)
 
I know: been there, done that...
By the way have I ever told you that Läuchli is the Swiss German diminutive of Lauch, which is leek?
 
The horror :-)
 
You should set up wikileeks.org. "A wiki collecting all possible pathologies in Läuchli's model and beautifications thereof."
 
10:45 AM
Heh.
I'm actually giving the model a nice makeover.
 
This is also welcome on the site, see edit.
 
First, Lauchli wrote in German. Second, his terminology was awkward in a nowadays standard. Third, he used Quine's atoms as atoms which make the construction harder.
In my result there is a slight improvement too, since I show consistency with an $\mathbf{DC}_\kappa$ for unbounded $\kappa$ (though bounded in every model, of course).
 
Fourth: his notation is ghastly
 
Yeah, that too.
I'm really glad that I have all the proofs on MSE and MO. Saves me a lot of time :-)
 
Just make sure that you include the CC license :)
(for the copy-paste jobs)
 
10:49 AM
It's not gonna be a complete copy-paste.
Also I believe that I retain the freedom to copy-paste my own posts elsewhere.
 
Better be safe than sorry... At least mention it somewhere :) Remember those German ministers whose name was like the inventor of the printing press...
 
Well, I am going to put both communities in the acknowledgments with links in footnotes :-)
 
Very good!
eeeeeek it's snowing again :(
 
I have also decided to put a quote on the dedication page.
 
Still the same as yesterday?
 
10:54 AM
From Babylon 5. I know the quote from a German black metal song that used the German dub at the end of one of their albums.
 
@tb Yeah. I find it more meaningful than any dedication I can write.
"Shalosh B. Ekhad" Hah!
It's Hebrew for Three-In-One.
 
Yeah, Doron has quite a few idiosyncrasies :)
@AsafKaragila You know that it's his computer and co-author?
 
@tb Yeah. I know that.
 
I think I'll go with classical Greek: Ī¤į½° į½„Ī½Ļ„Ī± į¼°Ī­Ī½Ī±Ī¹ Ļ„Īµ Ļ€Ī¬Ī½Ļ„Ī± ĪŗĪ±į½¶ Ī¼Ī­Ī½ĪµĪ¹Ī½ Īæį½Ī“Ī­Ī½.
It was suggested in one of the papers/books I read, but I forgot which. :-/
 
11:01 AM
Nice.
Yeah, going with a Greek philosopher is somewhat better than Babylon 5.
 
Aha! It was Lambek's review of Strooker, suggested by @tb.
 
@tb Yay! : )
Poor you : (
 
It's okay. How's the kitty doing?
 
11:17 AM
@t.b., can I run an answer by you? I'm having trouble sleeping because I think it's wrong.
 
Depends on what it is. You can try :)
 
I answered my own question here: math.stackexchange.com/questions/97128/… . Do not be afraid! It is a simple calculus exercises I apparently can't get right.
 
The kitties are fine, thanks. It was just for jabs.
 
@Potato okay, I'll have a look in a few minutes.
 
@t.b. Thanks! It is very much appreciated.
 
11:37 AM
@Potato Maybe you should say a few more words on "Note that for the points where they are defined, $dg_0=dg_1$ implying they differ by a closed 1-form"
(I don't think that what you say is what you intend)
 
Is it essentially correct? Does the "stitching" process work to construct the desired form?
It occurs to me that the domain of overlap has two connected components, which may be problematic
 
I'd like to hear a bit more on the existence of this closed $1$-form.
 
Well, let's get concrete first. The removed point be (-1,0), and a=-2.
 
Fine.
 
So the domain of $g_0$ is the plane minus the half-line from (-1,0) on the real axis down to negative infinity, and the domain of $g_1$ is the plane minus the half line from (-1,0) to infinity.
So they are both defined on a domain consisting of two disjoint half planes.
 
11:46 AM
yes.
 
Yes. This is very problematic.
Because they don't overlap on a simply connected domain.
 
exactly.
 
Ugh. Do you have any suggestions about how to remedy this?
It is almost 6am here any my need for a solution is outweighing my need for sleep.
 
I would probably use $\mathbb{R}^2 \smallsetminus \{\mathrm{pt}\} \cong S^1 \times \mathbb{R}$ and work from there.
 
Unfortunately this doesn't work when I want to generalize to $n$ points.
It seems like a slick way to solve that PDE is just waiting for me to find it.
 
11:59 AM
The generalization to $n$ points isn't going to be easy if you don't want to use Mayer-Vietoris.
 
The textbook exercise is just with two.
@tb I will settle for doing it "the hard way" with just two.
 
12:24 PM
@t.b. Well, by continuity, won't the constant they differ by on the top and the constant they differ by on the bottom half plane be the same?
 
12:34 PM
Sorry I was on the phone. Well, but where did you get that constant from in the first place?
 
Just delete that sentence; I think it's wrong anyway.
The argument should still work, I think.
 
I have no problem with the constant. I have a problem with the closed $1$-form...
 
There is no closed 1-form. It never existed and no longer exists.
Ignore any mention of 1-forms.
 
12:56 PM
I don't want to interrupt, but does anyone have time for a quick question?
 
Sure.
 
I'm working on an exercise proving $f$ is continuous, where if $f$ is a real function with domain $\mathbb{R}$, with the property such that $f(a)<c<f(b)$, then $f(x)=c$ for some $x$ between $a$ and $b$. Also, for every rational $r$, the set of $x$ such that $f(x)=r$ is closed. There's a hint saying if $x_n\to x_0$ but $f(x_n)>r>f(x_0)$, then use this to find a contradiction (con't)
I do this by assuming $f$ is not continuous at some point $x_0$, so there is a sequence $x_n\to x_0$ such that $f(x_n)\not\to f(x_0)$. From this I could extract a subsequence such that $f(x_n)>f(x_0)$ for all $x_n$ in the subsequence.
The one thing I'm wary about is why one such rational $r$ should exist. What if the $f(x_n)$ of the subsequence get arbitrarily close to $f(x_0)$ from above? Would this contradict $f(x_n)\not\to f(x_0)$ for the $x_n$ in the original sequence somehow?
After that I know how to finish it up.
 
1:11 PM
@yunone: You must use the extra condition.
There are functions with the intermediate value property which aren't continuous.
 
@yunone: check out Conway's base 13 function...
(to follow up on Zhen's comment)
 
I am using the extra condition that the $x$ such that $f(x)=r$ is closed. I use the intermediate value condition to find a sequence of preimages of $r$ that approach $x_0$.
So $x_0$ is a limit point, and thus in that set, so I get $f(x_0)=r>f(x_0)$, a contradiction.
I was just curious why I could easily assume such $r$ existed.
 
Well, either $f(x_n) = f(x_0)$ or not. If not, then there's a rational between $f(x_n)$ and $f(x_0)$.
 
Does the $r$ possibly change for each $n$? Maybe I'm reading it wrong.
 
Hm, right, in context it does seem we want to have an $r$ that works for all $n$.
 
1:16 PM
I know $\mathbb{Q}$ is dense in $\mathbb{R}$, but I wasn't sure if there would be one single $r$ that works for all $n$.
Like if $f(x_n)-f(x_0)\leq\frac{1}{n}$ or something.
 
OK, let's try again: either $\lim f(x_n)$ exists or it doesn't; if it does, then by hypothesis $\lim f(x_n) \ne f(x_0)$, so there is such a rational.
 
Btw, thanks for the link @tb.
 
@ZhenLin: come to think of it... I wanted to ask you for a long time already: Is your first name Zhen or Lin? I guess it's the latter but I'm not sure.
 
@tb: My given name is Zhen Lin. (I don't use my family name here.)
 
So is using Zhen alone inappropriate?
(that's what I really wanted to know)
 
1:21 PM
@ZhenLin I took an arbitrary sequence $x_n\to x_0$ but $f(x_n)\not\to f(x_0)$, but then took a subsequence $x_m$ such that $f(x_m)>f(x_0)$. Is it true that $\lim(f_m)\neq f(x_0)$ still? Because then I could just take $r$ between the limit and $f(x_0)$ like you suggested.
 
QED
ah it's two word name
so "Zhen" is like saying "t."
 
Thanks Q
 
@QED Not exactly, since t.b. is the full name abbreviated.
 
Eh, I'm used to it. Most people just call me Zhen.
 
@ZhenLin Better than most people calling you Evelyn, I guess.
 
1:24 PM
@yunone: Yes, you could end up with a subsequence converging to $f(x_0)$. But why not pick some other subsequence?
@Asaf: I voted NARQ.
 
@AsafKaragila that made sense until he wrote the equation.
 
@ZhenLin You're right, I'm foolish. That's an easy fix, thanks.
 
@yunone: how's the uniform continuity thingie doing?
 
Good. One more vote and then the trusted users can call the delete macrophages.
 
Bad questions can't be very nutritious.
 
1:28 PM
@ZhenLin For the body? No, but for the macrophages... yum yum yum!
 
QED
why are people so mad?
a heisenberg set theory of the universe?
 
@QED I blame the public schools and today's pop culture.
 
@t.b. Pretty well I think. I wrote it down at the end of my Rudin document, and I think it makes sense now. It's in my profile if you ever are bored and care to see.
 
I blame scientific divulgation, that makes people think they can grasp concepts in physics without knowing the math behind them.
 
I blame overloading of English words.
 
1:30 PM
@yunone "my Rudin document" -- sounds cool =)
 
@yunone why don't you post it as an answer to your own question?
 
@Srivatsan Thanks, I have a few footnotes in it thanking you and t.b. I hope you don't mind of course.
 
@Asaf: I must admit, after seeing this question I'm confused about what a boolean-valued model is.
 
@t.b. Sure, I will try to do that now.
 
@yunone :) Thanks. I am quite impressed with the document.
 
1:32 PM
@yunone That would be great :)
 
@ZhenLin It's a model of a theory, but with values in a CBA and not just a T/F setting.
 
And thanks for the acknowledgment!
 
@tb Wait until you see my thesis :-P
 
@Asaf: Yes, that's what I understood as well, but there must be more to it. Every model of set theory is such a boolean-valued model.
 
@ZhenLin Huh?
 
1:34 PM
@yunone I want to see your macros/template file. Is it possible to put it up in your profile as well?
 
{ 0, 1 } is a complete boolean algebra...
 
@AsafKaragila I already have an acknowledgment overflow from you... :) By the way: if you include the socks thingie in your thesis. Be careful not to call the elements of your two points sets $a_n$ and $b_n$...
 
@tb Yeah, I wouldn't want a few people confusing internal and external elements again.
@tb Also, there is a major chapter about socks. I follow Goldstern's construction and the development both of us did over an email correspondence to the vector space with a basis that has a subspace without one.
 
@Srivatsan I have all the raw TeX files uploaded on Google docs. I can share them too. I'll let you know when I have them up.
Is that what you're asking about?
 
@AsafKaragila Oh, cool! Now you just have to write all that :)
@yunone "raw TeX"... Does that mean you use plain TeX?
 
1:37 PM
@tb I have a lot written in various places (including my own tex files). After this semester ends, I don't have to take any more courses so I can sit through the nights and finish the document.
 
(wouldn't have thought that there are young people doing that)
 
@yunone Something like that. I'll know when I see it. (I want to see how you manage stuff like Exercise, Solution,...) Thanks.
 
@t.b. Oops, maybe raw TeX doesn't mean what I think it means. I just meant my .tex files that aren't compiled into pdfs.
 
Ah, okay... There are a few people here who have that masochistic treat but they tend to be 50+
@yunone I didn't have any technical meaning in mind, of which I wouldn't be aware anyway. Just random nonsense that came to mind...
 
I could at least five users that can close questions on this chat... who did not vote to close that Heisenberg thing yet?
 
1:40 PM
@tb Are we talking in the abstract? Because I'm curious who that would be.
 
@Srivatsan Gerry and Christian Blatter for example.
 
@Asaf: Aha, I see. The question is about a specific kind of boolean-valued model, rather than generic ones.
 
I think Arturo said that he uses plain TeX.
 
@AsafKaragila he uses a hybrid.
 
@ZhenLin Yeah, and your use of generic is way worse than usual, since this is a forcing context :-)
@tb Like a Prius?
 
1:42 PM
@Srivatsan come to think of it: David Mitra, too.
 
I wonder if anyone here is trendy enough to be using post-LaTeX things. Or even LaTeX 3.
 
@tb How would you this fact? Have you come across their documents outside of MO/SE?
 
I use texlive, whatever is in there I'm fine with it.
In my office I have windows xp installed so I have MikTeX 2.8 or so.
 
@Srivatsan Only some of the things they wrote here. They have this distinct plain TeX smell...
 
(And I didn't think David Mitra is old. Something about the name suggested he is young. :-))
 
1:45 PM
@Srivatsan I have no idea how old he is. Around my age I'd have guessed.
(the exception confirming the rule as we say in German)
 
What are the visible signs of plain TeX?
 
(1) Old age.
tb will explain the other signs.
 
QED
heh
 
using \eqalign for example
or stuff like {\it blabla}
 
Ah, I thought the latter might be from plain TeX.
 
1:50 PM
@tb I haven't noticed this, I will when I get a chance. (I wonder when that chance would be; Gerry never seems to write a long enough answer =))
 
@Srivatsan look at this (from David) for example
 
I remember using \over! I forget where I learned such bad habits from though.
 
{\over}!? Next I guess it is {n \choose k}.
 
@Srivatsan I just uploaded it here: docs.google.com/…
 
I've a graph theory (vertex coloring?) related PRACTICAL problem I cant' solve, no matter how hard I try. Is this the right place to ask?
 
1:54 PM
@yunone Thanks for that.
I haven't read your answer yet, but it looks good at first glance.
 
I'm a non-mathematican and non native speaker. I'm building kind of a wooden puzzle and got stuck. My problem is: I have squares whose 4 edges have x different key-and-slot-patterns. Each square looks the same. Now I can join different squares to each other as long as they don't share the same key-and-slot-pattern.
 
@Srivatsan Thanks to you and t.b. of course. I hope I parsed it all right.
 
I prefer to see the keys and slots as a "color". That way each square has x colors whose edges can be joined to each other as long as their color differentiates. Joining may happen planar or perpendicular. In a first step I want to build a cube whose 6 faces consist out of 6 squares. I want to know how many different edge colors I need when building a) an ordinary cube b) a cube in cube system like the rubic's cube (3x3x3). Can anybody give me a tipp where to start?
 
@yunone No problem.
I have to go, see you all.
 
@yunone It looks good. The only thing I think you could improve is to say explicitly where your points $x,y,r,s$ are supposed to live. Especially in the last paragraph
(and no problem, of course)
@prinzdezibel This looks like a good question to ask for the main site. Unfortunately our resident combinatorialist just headed out
 
2:01 PM
@tb Thanks, I tried to edit it.
 
We have one? I didn't even realise.
 
t.b. what is the main site?
 
@prinzdezibel I meant this
 
@t.b. thx
 
@ZhenLin Srivatsan is pretty strong when it comes to combinatorics. Also, Mike Spivey drops by from time to time.
 
2:03 PM
Ah.
 
@yunone "The alternative proof in Exercise 11 only requires that the range space be complete, and so the range space can be replaced by any complete metric space or Rk . The proof oļ¬€ered here works if the metric space is compact, so the range space can be replaced by any compact metric space." -- Note that compact implies complete, so the second statement isn't quite necessary.
@tb Mike Spivey is strong, I am ok. =) There are others too (I'm not ranking them here).
@yunone There?
 
@Srivatsan Thanks! I remember that from reading a bit about general topology, but it's never mentioned in Rudin. I was just trying to keep it in line with the book. I guess the proof is not hard using sequential compactness though, so maybe I should fix that.
 
what exercise 11?
 
@yunone Oh, I see. It's true at least for metric spaces.
Exercise 4.13.
 
You only need completeness.
 
2:12 PM
@t.b. There's a bit more to that exercise in the document. I reference exercise 4.11 of Rudin to answer it.
 
@tb But yunone says they do not know the implication "compact metric spaces are complete". (deleted the rest of what I said)
 
Yeah, but you can do it for any complete metric space as range. The nested intervals (nested balls?) theorem only requires that. Completeness is of course necessary: try to extend $\mathbb{Q} \to \mathbb{Q}, x \mapsto x$ to a function $\mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{Q}$.
@Srivatsan but yunone mentioned sequential compactness?
 
@tb Oh I see. It's strange then. Having gone thus far, why wouldn't the author mention that fact then?
 
I obviously haven't read the document, so it might be better to just remain silent...
 
Shoot, maybe I'm mixing up what I know from Rudin and what I know from other books.
 
2:17 PM
@tb I am just skimming through it. Hopefully @yunone can sort it out; at least they know the fact now even if they are not allowed to use it. =)
@yunone =) That happens. I have to keep referring to the definitions every once in a while just so that I know what I cannot use, not what I can.
 
Well, I never even held "principles" in my hands once, so I don't know what Rudin's doing there. But from his other books I'd be rather surprised if he didn't mention compactness.
 
This question seems rescuable to me.
 
@Srivatsan I'm sure it gets even worse the more you know. Just curious, who's "they"? The audience?
 
"they" as in politically incorrect "he"
 
@yunone They probably refers to you. =) In gender neutral form.
@tb I prefer to use the term "gender-neutral" than "political correctness" =)
Talk about PC. :P
 
2:22 PM
Oh, is that an acceptable singular pronoun now? Hmm.
 
@Srivatsan Don't get me started on that nonsense again... :)
 
@yunone Well, no good alternative.
 
@yunone Singular they has a long history.
 
You're right, I tend to use "one" or "he or she" the the first sounds stuffy and the latter is too wordy.
@ZhenLin Wow, didn't know it went back that far.
 
@Srivatsan so, what's the antonym for gender-neutral? gender biased?
 
2:24 PM
By the way, @yunone, in Exercise 4.16, something is off in the definition of $[x]$. What is the value of $[4.14]$?
 
@yunone "One" is not quite the same as "they".
@tb "Gendered"
 
@tb Perhaps. Not sure. (That was just a joke; didn't intend you to get started on it.)
 
@Srivatsan I'd say $[4.14]=4$. Rudin's definition is weird, I just took it as the floor function.
 
@yunone But then you say "The functions [x] and (x) are both discontinuous at all n āˆˆ Z. If n is an integer [n+] = n + 1 but [nāˆ’] = n".
Which stands in stark contrast to my religious principles.
 
Rounding to "integers" is nastily complicated. I think IEEE 754 defines at least 4 modes.
 
2:28 PM
yunone, On a more serious note: something is a bit off either in the question or in the answer or both. Do check it.
 
@Srivatsan Are we both reading that $[n+]$ is the right hand limit?
and $[n-]$ the left hand limit?
 
@yunone I think your previous comment was correct. Yes, $[4+] = 4$ since $[4+h] = 4$ for all small enough $h > 0$. On the other hand $[4-] = 3$.
Or not: one second. His definition might have a "problem" at the integers.
Anyway, I'm not in the mood to check boundary cases right now. You might want to take a second look at it though.
 
@Srivatsan Ok, I've rewrote it to shift things down $1$. Isn't $[x]$ just the floor function, stated strangely? I don't think there should be much of a problem at the integers. $[4]$ is the integer such that $3<[4]\leq 4$. So $[4]=4$.
 
@yunone I see. But $[4.14]$ comes out to $5$, not $4$...
 
Isn't $[4.14]$ the integer such that $3.14<[4.14]\leq 4.14$?
So it still comes out to $4$?
 
2:38 PM
@yunone I see. I was very confused, my bad. So his $[x]$ is just the usual one. What about your statement $[n+] = n+1$ and $[n-]=n$? That is certainly off by $1$, right?
 
@Srivatsan Yeah, I wasn't thinking when I wrote that. I mentioned above that I've since fixed it to say $[n+]=n$ and $[n-]=n-1$. Don't know what I was thinking.
 
@yunone Sure. OK, see you.
 
@Srivatsan See you later.
 
(telling myself) This time, I am leaving *for real*.
 
QED
why not stay?
 
2:45 PM
Quick English question: "$A$ has property (P) while $B$ hasn't" or "while $B$ doesn't"?
 
QED
both are fine
 
Thanks
 
QED
"doesn't" is probably slightly more canonical
 
I think I may have an awesome epiphany.
 
What is it?
 
2:49 PM
Oh, something about my thesis. Some cool generalization.
 
Sounds pretty cool. I wish I could even begin to understand it.
 
If you continue with set theory, you could.
 
Maybe, I plan to eventually take a real set theory class one day.
 
Well, if you ever in the neighborhood...
 
00:00 - 15:0015:00 - 00:00

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