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00:00 - 23:0023:00 - 00:00

00:03
@anon so many thanks!
bbl
@mixedmath How is your analysis?
00:29
@PeterTamaroff i'll note your objection. maybe some sort of early parole could be arranged with good behavior, we'll see.
@AlexanderGruber Thank you.
@AlexanderGruber I have a dope proof of something.
what's that?
@AlexanderGruber The asymptotics of the iteration of a function.
which function?
Let $0\leq f(x)\leq x$, and for $0<x<x_0$ $$f(x)=x-ax^k+bx^\ell+x^\ell \varepsilon(x)$$ with $\varepsilon\to 0$ for $x\to 0$. Here $b,a>0$ and $1<k<\ell$. Define for a fixed $0<x<x_0$ the sequence $$v_0=x_0\\v_{n+1}=f(v_n)$$ Then $$\lim_{n\to\infty} n v_n^{k-1}=\frac{1}{a(k-1)}$$
00:44
that is really weird, @PeterTamaroff. :p
@AlexanderGruber Ah?
i'm going to try it out
I flagged math.stackexchange.com/questions/426495/… as off-topic a while back, and my flag was determined to be "helpful". Why is the question still here?
@dfeuer You got a pat on the back. That's all! =)
For it to be deleted or closed a mod or high rep users must take some course of action.
Pats on the back are great, but I am curious how to make "helpful" flags that actually help something.
00:50
@dfeuer i didn't review that flag but i assume the mod that did probably read the question, disagreed with the flag, but still marked it helpful because he thought it was worth considering
Hello all...slow weekend on math.se!
Is it slow on chat, too? :-(
@dfeuer So I looked at the log, and robjohn cleared that flag. What I suspect is that he asked the CrossValidated mods if they wanted the question, and they said no
(which we do before we migrate things, usually)
so what you said was helpful, but... not acted on
@AlexanderGruber I think I will post the proof on main.
@PeterTamaroff ah, that is strange
the problem you ask, that is
@mixedmath Why?
01:00
@PeterTamaroff the epsilon function in particular makes it exciting or something. Dunno, just a feeling, nothing formal
@mixedmath Heh, the $\varepsilon$ is slightly irrelevant. I mean, we need it, yes.
But it is not the core of the proof.
@mixedmath the $k$ weirds me out
01:11
@AlexanderGruber Posted @mixedmath @anon
Guys?
@user1 Hey!
@PeterTamaroff Hello, there.
@user1 See my post above! =D
@AlexanderGruber Dude, did you see it?
@PeterTamaroff i'm reading it atm
@PeterTamaroff I am also reading it.
@AlexanderGruber LOL
@AlexanderGruber Check out "Bounce".
01:35
@AlexanderGruber So, does it look less strange now?
@PeterTamaroff i sang that song in concert once. :p
@PeterTamaroff yeah it does
@AlexanderGruber You're in a band?
@PeterTamaroff i used to be, this was a long time ago.
@AlexanderGruber Heh, nice!
I play the guitar. Now I'm mostly helping my brother out since he sings, so I play the backing chords and stuff.
@AlexanderGruber Today we were doing this one
I get so discouraged sometimes...I think I'm going to have to spend less time on math.se...It has become "too" important to me (too much time) !! Okay...now let's see if I can manage that...I don't want to have to pull a "jasper"!! ;-)
01:44
@amWhy What be oozing your chillies?
@PeterTamaroff hehehe I like your "lingo"! I just put too much importance/time into the site...And take too much too personally...
@amWhy What is "lingo"? I guess you don't mean "...a comprehensive software designed to make building and solving linear, nonlinear and integer optimization models faster, easier and more efficient."
"lingo" is short for "language"...particularly used in the context of describing one's dialect and slang...
@amWhy Aha!
@PeterTamaroff I have to watch my slang (lingo is a "slang" term)...on such an international site...I've found myself needing to explain my usage of "slang" a few times now.
01:50
@MarianoSuárez-Alvarez Ahoy.
@amWhy Hmm, I know a little slang, and sometimes I fish out words from my head I didn't even know I knew. It is kinda weird, because I don't speak English on a daily basis, but I have studied English for a long time, so many many stuff has sunk on meh brainz.
@PeterTamaroff :-) (+1 for your post)
@amWhy Thanks.
02:13
hi all
02:32
hi @vvavepacket
@Kasper hello!
how are u doing ?
im doing some exercises in the math book
haha nice !
which one ?
um How to think like mathematician by Houston.
@Kasper Lord_farin told me to finish this first so us to clear my mind when reading Ross works
02:35
hm.. that may be a good idea
I'm building a math blog
oh thats great
is it online?
yes, I just finished a version that looks a little bit like something :)
if you click on the menu it should move away
what is this language
lemme guess
german?
let me guess kasper
no german :p
w8. i think i know this
it sounds like it came from somewhere in amsterdam
when i read it, the pronounciation sounds like amsterdammyy
02:41
yes !! :P
that's correct
:D
what is the name of language if you dont mind
dutch
I'm from the netherlands
oh glad to know that
@Kasper you rarely skype right?
it just sits on your computer
yes, I never skype actually :p
i think dutch is one of the hardest
to learn
02:44
I don't know, I think french is most difficult
but that's me :p
i think dutch is between german and english
what you think
I think that may be correct
But what do you think about this concept:
Splitting a math book, in small parts, and making a blog of it like this.
Then you have comment section where people can help each other out to understand the math book better
thats a great idea
+1 for me.
u know why?
why ?
coz people from all over the world might b reading the book, and they can be in different chaptersl. so there must be a way for them to interact chapter by chapter
says person 1 is in chap 4, person 2 is in chap 1
so person 1 can leave a comment and share something. and by the time person 2 jumps to chap 4, they can interact.
that way, records on how people treat a chapter will be save, and can be viewed later.
overall, people will go to it and add ideas.
ideas will add up, and be consolidated overtime. so new people can go and view it, and after they finish the chapter, check their answer, verify the results and share something
02:51
hi
hi fawzy
@Kasper what do you think
hi , kasper seems to be telling you about his blog
@vvavepacket yeah it would be awesome if things like that would happen
you can click on the menu to slide away
is that link intended only for dutch people
yes , this is great
02:52
i want to participate but can't comprehend it:9
@vvavepacket , learn Dutch :D
@vvavepacket I think in holiday I will add some english book
@MathsLover arabic + dutch
Cool haha!
but it seems that arabic is more difficult than dutch !
@AlexanderGruber I really wish that moderators would stop dismissing flags-to-close as helpful while leaving the question open. Flags to close are in a category separate from flags for a moderator attention. Questions flagged in this way automatically go into the Close Vote queue for 3K+ users, who decide what to do with them. That is, unless a mod clears the flag, preventing the peer review from happening.
One problem with moderators handling flags to close is a bias for inaction: moderators prefer not to use their binding votes (and rightly so). Leaving the flag in place allows the decision to be made by five reviewers, who are not constrained by having a binding vote.
03:02
guys, whats wrong with goldbach conjecture?
I'm going to sleep, enough work for today
@vvavepacket , the wrong is that no one could prove it !
good night @Kasper
is it hard to prove?
@mathslover مع السلامة
i mean, how do we prove bach?
how do we prove goldbach conjecture? what are the steps
how do we perform cold fusion? what are the steps
totally serious question
I expect an answer in this chatroom
@anon Are you on crack?
03:12
no, I am a satirical genius
If we had the steps it wouldnt be a conjecture
@anon \mewikis " It has been rejected by the mainstream scientific community because the original experimental results could not be replicated consistently and reliably, and because there is no accepted theoretical model of cold fusion."
@anon BTW
@peter why is that goldbach conjecture cant be prove
@vvavepacket What?
@Peter edited
03:17
@vvavepacket You're telling me you read/heard "Goldbach's conjecture cannot be proven"?
@Peter, sorry, i really mean whats wrong with Goldbach conjecture, why is that until now, no one can show proof for it
Because it is hard
@vvavepacket I have no idea.
Maybe @WillJagy can explain, dunno.
@WilJagy help us
03:51
@anon lol.
@vvavepacket Someone made a proof of something related to it, no? Minor and major arcs for goldbach conjecture?
that was the weak goldbach i think.
04:33
@Bageer Goldbach without work-out.
@BandeiraGustavo work-out?
05:33
@Bageer Yes. In the poledance.
@BandeiraGustavo In the poledance? I am not sure if it is just me, but you are not making any sense.
@BandeiraGustavo Up to any math?
06:32
@ˈjuː.zɚ79365 stop flagging questions that don't require moderator attention then. those are for questions which require urgent attention
06:43
@AlexanderGruber Only the first of the options says "needs moderator attention". The flags to close are the second category.
07:26
Goldbach's conjecture is false, there's a counterexample around 10^80
08:21
@Bitrex Link please :-)
@anon Do you honestly believe Jordan deserved to be susended for an hour from the chatroom?
@skullpatrol I evaluated it with mah quantum computer
just checked every integer out to infinity :)
no, but an hour in the chatroom is not a big deal otoh. it's the mainsite suspension that's more curious and more significant - I don't know what the reason was.
If Jordan hated math before, I bet he really hates it now!
he's been through this cycle more times than you know. in a sense, you could say he's a veteran.
After years of being a "math hobbyist" I am finally buckling down and studying a real analysis text
It is pretty challenging, particularly for an oldie like me :(
08:33
@Bagger It depends.
08:58
anyone around with a little CoV experience?
@PeterTamaroff : Sure! Let's discuss it here
09:21
@MarianoSuárez-Alvarez are you around? I have a question about pure dimension
somehow I am not able to prove that if $Y$ is an algebraic set of dimension in $\Bbb{P}^n$ of pure dimension 1 and of degree $1$, then it has to be a linear variety. I know that $Y$ is irreducible though.
I can see this is true in $\Bbb{P}^2$
I tried inducting on $n$ and then like projecting onto a hyperplane
but it didn't work out
09:39
an algebraic set "of dimension"? Of dimension what?
10:15
of dimension 1
ah okay :P
 
1 hour later…
haha
 
2 hours later…
13:20
Oh dear how emberassing
huhu
there was a newspaper article about a nine year old who wants to go to university and study
and they said he is a over genious and they took a picture of an integral problem on a blackboard which he solved in "a few minutes" and the solution is plain wrong
13:38
Let him go to university and fail, lots of people do.
i mean how emberassing is that, when you are hyped but every freshman can see you totally failed ?
I agree :D
(-:
14:15
hey, short question: considering the differential quotient $\frac{f(x+h)-f(x)}{h}$ for $h\rightarrow0$ can $h$ be negative and positive, right? And also in a neighborhoud of e.g. 1 we can't assume $h>0$, right? thanks!
it can be both
thx
just wanted to be sure ;)
@jul8 I don't understand your second question. The limit itself has $x$ fixed.
@skullpatrol "

skullpatrol "Let him go to university and fail, lots of people do." - XD XD
14:30
@DominicMichaelis I was watching MIT's differential equations videos a while back and according to the professor in one of the videos half the class made the same mistake on some part of an exam
differentiating instead of integrating
and in one video he asks what the antiderivative of $\frac{1}{1 + x^2}$ is and there's a dead silence for 15 seconds as nobody answers
@Bitrex Makes me wonder if I have ever inadvertently made that mistake...
@user1 I know I have and still do!
@ˈjuː.zɚ79365 the only time questions should be flagged to close is if they are very clear cut cases, e.g. obvious duplicates (user asks the same question over and over), contest questions, racist rants. stuff where unilateral moderator close votes are needed. normal grey area close votes should be left to the community.
@Alexander, Laozi, the profile photo
14:45
@Vivian haha, close. it's Yu the Great.
@Alexander, ach so
@Alexander, very interesting. Why did you put him, nothing about math?
15:07
@Vivian i just like the picture, to be honest. :)
@AlexanderGruber I agree: normal closing should be done by community, not the moderators. Which is why flags to close are not called flags for moderator's attention. They automatically put the flagged question into the Close Review, where the community of 3K+ decides what to do with them.
The flag is automatically dismissed when the reviewers vote to close. No moderator action is needed at all.
@ˈjuː.zɚ79365 oh right you're talking about the 10k+ close flags
sure, i agree with you then.
 
2 hours later…
16:49
@Vrouvrou You have previously been instructed by multiple users not to repost links to chat to questions you have posted on main.
If someone could spare a second, ... math.stackexchange.com/questions/424903/…
@ Alexan: oh, sorry. didn't know that
@AlexanderGruber Success.
@JohnDoe746 see point 3 here
AlexanderGruber: yeah, my fault. i should learn how to read. :/
@JohnDoe746 no problem.
17:22
Yes
Peter?
 
1 hour later…
18:34
Can someone tell me what Taylor's Series for Complex Numbers is ??
@robjohn
@LittleChild I am not sure what you are asking
Taylor's Series .. what is it ???
In mathematics, a Taylor series is a representation of a function as an infinite sum of terms that are calculated from the values of the function's derivatives at a single point. The concept of a Taylor series was formally introduced by the English mathematician Brook Taylor in 1715. If the Taylor series is centered at zero, then that series is also called a Maclaurin series, named after the Scottish mathematician Colin Maclaurin, who made extensive use of this special case of Taylor series in the 18th century. It is common practice to approximate a function by using a finite number...
In mathematics, a Taylor series is a representation of a function as an infinite sum of terms that are calculated from the values of the function's derivatives at a single point.
So .. how do I calculate that for Complex Numbers ?
@LittleChild The same way you do for real numbers
Take the derivative.
@LittleChild Do you know how to get the Taylor Series for real functions?
18:52
@robjohn i saw you had lots of tags in your profile but couldn't find CoV. Does this mean you don't like it?
@JohnDoe746 CoV?
@robjohn calculus of variations
@JohnDoe746 I've answered a number of calculus of variations questions. Perhaps they were mistagged.
@robjohn do you have time to look at another one? i'm not sure if i understood it
@robjohn posted few days ago; if you get bored ;)
19:15
@robjohn No, I do not know how to do that for reals. I will learn that right away !
How do I take derivative of complex number ?
@JohnDoe746 That question is hard to understand. The formula you are looking at is a formula from CoV, but the question about $F$ does not appear to have anything to do with CoV. $F$ is dependent on the functional being minimized and whether $F$ is convex in the third variable is dependent on the functional.
@LittleChild taylor series is a representation of a function as an infinite sum [...] you are talking about functions, not numbers here
oops .. my bad. I meant functions :)
@LittleChild derivatives are not taken on complex or real numbers, they are taken on functions.
Yes, that too
functions on complex numbers
I dont seem to understand how to find limits and derivatives of these complex functions
I can do that for real functions, though :)
19:20
@LittleChild before you learn about Taylor Series, you should be familiar with derivatives.
I can do that on real functions. Didn't find a good resource for derivatives of complex functions
I did Google..
@LittleChild The definition is the same $f'(z)=\lim\limits_{h\to0}\frac{f(z+h)-f(z)}{h}$
Hello, sis :)
@robjohn hi
@LittleChild hi
19:22
oohh .. so say I have z = $a + b_i$
@LittleChild you just need to take the limit over all complex $h$ near 0.
and .. I need to get its derivative
that will be ?
@LittleChild I don't see a function there
oops..
f(z) = $z^2$
@LittleChild use the definition
19:24
f(z+h) = $(z+h)^2$
what is $(z+h)^2$?
$z^2 + 2zh + h^2$
$\frac{z^2+2zh+h^2-z^2}{h}$
$\frac{2zh + h^2}{h}$
@LittleChild as $h\to0$?
$\frac{2z + h}{1}$
@robjohn well, $\cal F$ is the usual functional you use. Now you know that $\cal F$ is seq. weakly. l.s.c. and we are in $\bb R$ so this is equivalent to $F$ being convex.
19:26
yeah .. I avoided that
so .. we have limit as .. 2z...
which is the same as derivatives for reals .. ?
@JohnDoe746 The functional depends on the variational problem being done.
Let's go mad on this one ..
@LittleChild why do you think it would be different?
f(z) = $4z^2 + z - i$
is that a valid function ??
Because .. it is complex .. I assumed its solution to be complex (I mean the English complex ... tough .. tricky)
@LittleChild yes
19:29
so $i$ is a constant ? and derivative of a constant is 0 ?
@LittleChild yes, you can get that from the definition
YEEEEHAAAA !! gets his pogo stick and hops around
Can you gimme some problems to solve ? on derivatives of complex numbers ?? :)
I never expected it to be this easy, sir. I was expecting to have to rummage through a tome with some cryptic Greek symbols trying to get my head around this :)
@robjohn so by extension , integration is also the same ????
@robjohn well, "dacarogna - direct methods in the CoV" says in his Theorem 3.15, that if $\cal F$ is s.w.l.s.c. then $F(x,z,p)$ is convex in p.
@robjohn Could you take a look on another proof of mine to a problem we discussed in the past? I wonder if there are some shortcuts to the way I used this time. I'd appreciate some feedback from your side. :-)
@LittleChild you need to be careful. Antidifferentiation is essentially the same (with some caveats), but contour integration has other considerations.
19:34
What on earth are those ??
@robjohn Now, derivatives have some formulas for reals .. do they apply for complex, too ?
$\frac{dx^2}{dx} = 2x$
@LittleChild too much to go into until you know more about complex analysis. Contour integration deals with integration over paths.
I heard in one lecture that Limits in complex functions is different from limits in reals
@robjohn
@LittleChild for the most part. It depends on how you extend the functions to the complex numbers. But if you use polynomials, the formulas stay the same.
hmm.. seems like I can finally get Complex Analysis into my head :)
@LittleChild well, limits in complex numbers are like limits in $\mathbb{R}^2$
19:37
The next lecture is on Taylor's Series for Complex functions.. I should learn that first for real functions ??? :)
@LittleChild That is usually the way it is done
hmm... and if I can do that on real functions, the procedure stays the same for complex functions ??
what I mean is ... I am working on reducing my steep learning curve here :)
Let me sum it up:
**derivatives** stay the same for complex and real functions *work reduced*
**Taylor's Series** remains the same *work reduced*
**integration** has its subtleties. *work*
@robjohn
@LittleChild Derivatives certainly don't stay the same!
uhh ?? why ??
rules of derivatives for real functions do not apply ?? :)
@LittleChild Yes, but the story is very different. Let me find a question on MSE:
19:46
find some basic one .. or a reference-for-beginners would do :)
Added to favorites. Will check it in the morning
getting late here :)
Hi @HenningMakholm long time no see.
@HenningMakholm how are you?
20:01
Someone went through and upvoted my 5 top questions in a span of about 200 seconds. Now waiting for the serial-vote detector to kick in ...
@HenningMakholm Think it'll be reversed?
@PeterTamaroff Wouldn't surprise me, but I don't know exactly where the threshold is.
@HenningMakholm Hmm... doesn't look like something bad. You surely deserve them.
Maybe someone just likes your style.
20:18
@HenningMakholm
Anyone of you guys interested in calculus of variations? i posted a problem a few days ago and i'm having a little trouble with it.
@PeterTamaroff Yes? Imagine I wrote something falsely modest there. :-)
@HenningMakholm Heh. I wonder if you know about Stokes theorem and friends.
@PeterTamaroff Hm, no, not by far. I've never really understood exterior derivatives.
@HenningMakholm Ah, OK.
20:33
@HenningMakholm have you read the graphic novel "Logicomix"?
 
1 hour later…
21:45
hi all
22:29
@vvavepacket Hi :)
how are you doing ?
still enjoying your math journey ?
@vvavepacket are u there ?
@Kasper yes Im reading a math book.
@Kasper yes of course! enjoying it!
but I got a dilemma
hm.. tell me
by the way, I finished my blog, it know look decent:
http://euclidthegame.com/books/LA2/H3/Sectie%203.1/1-1.php
in chrome
you see Ill be completing my undergraduate as an electrical engineer. but i love math. i mean theres no way for me to become a mathematician like you
ok im checking your blog..
I mean look at you, you got a full blown math degree unlike me
22:39
yeah, it will be kind of hard to combine, but can't you switch to math major ?
i cant
hm.. that sucks
Is the navigation working on that website ?
yeah
i can navigate
nice !
22:44
I've now everything finished, to upload more books.
I can't of have the template, that will work with every book.
Now I just need to split the pdf's, and the rest works automaticly.
for some reason I love to see math really big projected on my screen :)
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