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00:15
I haven't seen Chris's sis since this moring (morning here)
Hmm... she was on the main site an hour ago.
00:36
@robjohn Well, maybe I wasn't here, so she thought there was no point coming, lol.
@JasperLoy That must be it.
I am trying to find the insect which bit me ten times or so, either mosquito or something else, in my room.
Hello @Alizter remember not to read Lie Groups, just study for your A level exams and get into Cambridge.
@JasperLoy I have been studying
@Alizter Good for you. I have been thinking of how to solve my mental problems.
@JasperLoy Start reading one of your books. You know, just for fun. You don't have to do the exercises. Just read through. You can come back to exercises later
5
00:51
@Alizter That is really good advice... I find that if I ever set out to work every exercise in a book, I'll never finish. But, if I set out to just read through a book, I'll certainly finish. :)
user97303
01:26
hey @JasperLoy
user97303
does anyone have a copy of "Algebraic Graph Theory", by Gordon Royle and Chris Godsil?
02:19
I was about to watch a video about a board game. But then it seemed too complicated for the moment. So, instead I decided to watch a video about Ultrafilter by Terry Tao........ how does this make any sense????
 
1 hour later…
03:20
Hello @KajHansen how are your classes?
 
2 hours later…
05:36
Whats the name of the NOT baby Rudin analysis book? If it Real and Complex Analysis?
Yes @KevinDriscoll
@JasperLoy, not bad so far. I'm in for a very busy semester though.
@MaryStar, I've been busy this evening. Did you figure out your problem?
@KajHansen It's weird that you replied two hours later, after I went out and returned.
I should be doing work, but I think I'm going to relax with some video games...
@JasperLoy, is there a gym near you?
@KajHansen Not too near, but yes. Why do you ask?
Don't tell me you are planning to live with me.
@KajHansen What are you going to play?
05:45
@JasperLoy It's one of those rare times when I'm actually feeling not-depressed after going hard in the gym a bit ago. Though it's mostly temporary, it helps.
@KevinDriscoll, an indie game called Binding of Isaac. Might play some Skyrim later.
And even later maybe I'll get around to TeX'ing my topology homework.
@KajHansen I am going to give myself another 6 more years to enter grad school. I set the upper bound at age 40.
Life is too short to wait @JasperLoy. Plus you get less creative as you age.
@KajHansen Ah, excellent game. You playing Rebirth?
@KajHansen Sure, but healing takes time. I might never get well. And the creativity part is bullshit to me.
Indeed! I'm nearly platinum god @KevinDriscoll. I've beaten all the challenges and all bosses using all characters on hard.
I just need to actually find all the items I've unlocked now.
@JasperLoy, something weird happens when we age. I definitely remember having a more extensive imagination when my age was in the single digits.
05:49
Aaaaah, excellent. You're farther than I am. I was very close to Platinum God in the original. I think I just had a handufl of items and some no damage achievements to do....... then Rebirth came out finally
I don't know what I'm talking about of course :P
@KajHansen One reason I got mentally ill is because I am too imaginative.
Do you remember a time when you were healthy @JasperLoy ? My problems started in 2010. I miss my old self.
I feel like I'm getting a little better as of late.
@KajHansen There is no clear time when I became mad. But if you want me to give a time, I would say 16 years ago, when I was 18.
@KevinDriscoll, where are you in your education?
05:51
I need to kill that fucking mosquito. It has bitten me ten times.
@KajHansen Working on my PhD
Oh nice. I'm just a third year undergrad myself. Where are you at?
Georgia Tech! About an hour from Ted Shifrin.
I'm a physicist though
Nice! I see Ted several times a week. I've had him for three courses now.
I have countless friends attending GA Tech.
Ah, another Bulldog. Sorry we can't be friends anymore :-(
(but Im a grad student so it doesn't really matter to me!)
Now if you went to UNC...... THEN we'd have problem (#GoDuke)
05:56
haha! I don't really get into rivalries myself.
I just stick to my math and my weightlifting :P
As close as UGA and GaTech are, they'll never be as close as Duke and UNC.
Yeah? How far apart are we talking? @KevinDriscoll
@KajHansen 8 miles. 20 minutes by bus, every half hour on the half hour. Less by car.
Woah. You weren't kidding!
So do you know JimmyK on here? I was talking to him the other day.
No I cant say that I do
how would I?
06:05
He's also a grad student at GA Tech
In math of course
Ah ok do you know who he works for? Ive had very limited interaction with the math department. Theyre reasonably far from each other on campus.
(which is a change for me, at Duke they're in the same building!)
Can't say that I do. Are you studying physics/statistics?
Just physics. Cold atom theory.
Oh very cool. My dad is a physical chemist. He's doing work in that area.
He's studying supercooled liquids, particularly those that tend to form networks of hydrogen bonds, like water.
Some of the things those people do, I can't even begin to imagine. They have the craziest ideas sometimes, those chemists!
06:09
Well, I actually don't know what cold atom theory entails. It's probably a lot more different than I realize.
He was a math major at UW back in the day. He took real analysis from Rudin himself.
I suppose he has a Rudin number of 1 then
and his students a Rudin numbe rof 2, and so on
LOL, and I guess that makes me an Erdos 2 :P
My combinatorics professor last year was an Erdos 1.
I think Mike Miller is working on his Erdos-Bacon number
which is the sum of the steps you are removed from both Erdos AND Kevin Bacon
hahaha
If you don't mind me asking, what ethnicity are you @KajHansen? I like to mentally keep track of the background of people I talk to. If you were named John or something, I'd just assume you were Caucasian European, but Kaj is unique to me.
06:17
I am Caucasian European. My ancestors were vikings, and both sides of my family are from the Norway/Denmark area. "Kaj" means "Earth" in some Old Norse dialect (as in earth, fire, water, air).
So the "j" in my name is pronounced as it is in all those cool Norse words like fjord or the names of Skyrim characters.
Ah! Okay, that's pretty interesting. Shattering my stereotype that all Scandanavian people are named Magnus, Jon, and Sven or something similar.
I.e. Kaj = Sky without the "S"
My last name is in the traditional Norwegian style though. "sen" = "son of". So you get a lot of surnames like Christiansen, Arnoldsen, etc.
No relation to the Japanese word, kai, I imagine
None at all. I get asked that a lot though, lol
AH WOW! And now I know. I had noticed the patter, e.g. Magnus carlsen
06:22
Yep!
Sometimes you see that sort of thing but it's "son" instead. That indicates a Swedish background instead of Norwegian.
Is that a recent change? Like, I know Norwegian has like 2 ways of writing; the old way and the new way that they updated to be inline with phonetic pronunciation
I'm not sure. I don't actually speak any of those languages.
Gotcha. I roomed with 2 Swedish guys a couple years ago so I learned all of their prejudicial feelings about people or Norwegian decent
I'm actually not familiar with that either. I'm not first generation or anything like that.
My family's been in America for 3 or so generations.
Ya, I figured. What about Lutefisk, anyone ever make you eat that stuff?
06:32
My grandmother makes it sometimes, LOL
My step-grandfather was from Minnesota but his family was form Norway as well
Loved that stuff.......but oh man was it TERRIBLE
hahahaha
Also, I saw your pic with Ron Paul on your Facebook (creepy Facebook stalker, RIGHT HERE!!!), and it makes me jealous
I dont always agree with him, but I am a libertarian
Don't tell the mods; we might not be allowed in the chat at the same time anymore
LOL. I'm fine with people looking me up on Facebook. I added the link for a reason.
That was in South Carolina at Wofford College. I saw him in a debate live too that day with the other Republican candidates.
I'm not a Republican though. I'm definitely on the libertarian side of things.
Oh yea, I've been to Wofford once or twice. I'm from Greenville so its not too far.
makes sense that he'd be debating in SC given its primary position
06:41
What sorts of music do you listen to?
Did you ever identify as Republican? I stopped being a Republican around the time the President was elected. I wonder now if there will be people who will not be going basically their whole adult lives self-identifying as libertarians
You know, I don't take time out to listen to music all that often, despite the fact that I play the guitar. But I go through phases. Usually I want to hear some catchy top 40 song from the radio so I go listen to it on youtube. But then I end up in some bizarre string of songs hopping through youtube.
Kind of? But by the time I was sufficiently well-informed and interested in politics, I was a libertarian.
I'm actually not interested in politics very much anymore. I just focus on math at this point.
That goes through Kanye West and Killer Mike but also Depeche Mode and A-Ha AND Metallica AND John Coltrane....... and well you sorta see how this goes
About the only things I don't listen to are country (but I like bluegrass) and anything labeled metal from the past 5 years or so
Yeah, I feel you. I'm very, very much into music myself. I have a fairly extensive library....all sorts of genres. It's great because it allows me to connect to a lot of people as sort of an icebreaker.
Yea, I love that aspect. In my own experience I know its easy to mischaracterize whole groups of people if you don't have any of them in your social circle. And my social circle is VERY white (as you might expect from my academic post), so I really appreciate that hip hop exists as a thing I can usually talk about with someone who's black. Once you get over that initial hump its a lot easier to see other stuff to talk about.
06:52
Yeah, that's a good point. I don't listen as much to modern hip-hop, but I listen to a ton of 90's hip hop.
It's a very natural topic of discussion when you're hanging out with someone for the first time, so there are huge advantages like you pointed out.
LOL @skullpatrol
I don't think I've ever asked...where are you in your education @Skull ?
Ya to be fair, I've sworn off a lot of Top 40 hip hop these days. I basically listen to Kanye now and some slightly more underground stuff that I heard about recently like Run The Jewels. I love that 90s flow. People spend a lot of time now, I think, on writing catchy hooks and choruses and such and relatively less time on treating their voice like a percussion instrument that can add interesting rhythm to the song.
And then there is humor.
Like I said, I don't listen to much modern hip hop, but I do like Kanye's Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy.
Lupe Fiasco is decent for recent stuff too.
06:58
I'm some where between a banana and a mango @KajHansen ;-)
Of course :P
MBDTF is part of my "work mix." If I really need to focus and get lots done I have a playlist for that and its a big part of it.
It's not so much study music for me. But hip-hop is a go-to genre when I'm getting myself psyched up on the way to a test or on the way to the gym.
How do you feel about Yeezus?
Eh, not as familiar as I probably should be. Any favorite tracks I can YouTube?
07:06
@skullpatrol I just called my best friend. He said some things to me which showed he did not understand me anymore. So I think I have just lost my best friend. I won't talk to him anymore.
It's a pretty weird Kanye album. My favorite track is Bound 2, I think
Interesting music video
Oh ya I forgot about that.....absolutely ridiculous
hahaha
@KajHansen Aren't you sleeping?
07:10
@JasperLoy, it's not that late here
2 AM is basically early for a Friday
Really, @KajHansen should be out gettin shwasty-faced
LOL, you're probably right. Maybe I'd actually find a girl for once.
If you keep asking , you'll find one with probability approaching 1. Only question is if you want to find a girl at a bara.
or dorm party
Do they have parties in the dorms at UGA?
Its basically not allowed here.... which I find perplexing
I greatly prefer dorm/house parties.
@KajHansen Hi.
07:18
Yeah, it's allowed. Though where I live is technically a dorm, it very much feels like an apartment.
Large bedrooms, living rooms, kitchen, etc.
Mostly upperclassmen.
Over the years, my friends have left me one by one, due to my mental illness. Now I have only a few left.
Hey there @BalarkaSen
I am still looking for that mosquito.
I don't want ten bites to become twenty.
The bites are extremely big and itchy.
Unfortunately for you, the number of bites grows GEOMETRICALLY
WTF
If it bites again I will need to think of a solution.
07:25
@KajHansen Think of an infinite group. Quick.
$\mathbb{Z}$.
@KajHansen Draw the Cayley graph.
Why are you ordering him?
Ugh, I have to go back and review how to draw them.
@KajHansen if $G$ is a group, the cayley graph of $G$ with generating set $S$ is the graphs with nodes being elements of $G$ and edges joined between nodes $a$, $b$ if and only if $a^{-1}b \in S$
07:27
Ok, so $\{1\}$ is a generating set.
$\{1, -1\}$, sure.
Woah, woah, let's be careful @BalarkaSen
There's a difference between generating set and the set of generators.
OK, yeah, I meant the latter :P
Sorry.
Ok cool
So for one, we get this giant "line" of nodes/edges. (n, n+1) is an edge for all $n \in \mathbb{Z}$.
Exactly.
07:30
I guess that's all you get, haha
It's the real line with integer marked nodes.
@Kaj Now choose a node from your graph.
Ok, I'll choose $2$.
Sure. Now oh noes I forgot one thing. Nodes $a$ and $a\cdot s$ ($s \in S$) in the Cayley graph are joined and directed. OK?
There is an arrowed edge going from $a$ to $a \cdot s$
Ok, so there is an arrowed edge going from any element to any other element in our case?
Right.
Actually the direction is irrelevant. Hehe. My bad.
@KajHansen, so you chose $2$.
07:34
Sure
You see, there are two "rays" going from $2$. One begins at $2$ and goes towards infinity and begins at $2$ and goes the opposite ways towards negative infinity.
Certainly. I see that.
Informally, the "boundary" of this Cayley graph is $\{\infty, -\infty\}$
Now let us look at another example before going into the definition of a boundary.
Ok, what would be a good one to look at?
Consider the free group on two generators $\langle x, y \rangle$ and the generating set $\{x, y\}$
07:37
Not familiar with free groups unfortunately
@KajHansen Well, they're just group consisting of elements being finite words (say $xyxxxyxyxyxyyxx$)
Just two generators with no relation.
Ok, that's simple enough (no pun intended)
So would $\mathbb{Z}$ be a free group? I.e. $n = 1111111111...$ (n times)
Actually, no because $1$ and $-1$ in $\Bbb Z$ commutes ;)
That's a relation.
Hmm. Let me ask you another question: Do finite free groups exist?
Just trying to get a feel for these.
Yes, no problem, asking questions are good. I won't look at Cayley graphs of free groups since you're not familiar with those. No, free groups are not finite.
07:41
Ex: Would the dihedral group be a free group, with generators Flip and Rotation?
Dihedral groups have a relation.
If $r$ is rotation and $s$ is flip, then $srs = r^{-1}$
You can check that.
I'm already familiar with that. Just probing what you mean by "relation" and I think I understand now.
Yeah, so your group of $x$ and $y$ have no relation.
You can just build your words and go on and on and on and it won't reduce to anything simpler.
Cool cool. Are there any examples of free groups that can be expressed in a form I already know?
Hehe. Actually $\Bbb Z$ is a free group. My bad.
It's a free group on a single generator.
07:44
-_-
Cool. I guess there simply cannot be a relation when there's only 1 generator
@KajHansen I do that everytime. Decline true statements as false with weird logic and then decline my logic and apologize. Please bear with me :P
lol ok
@KajHansen Yeah. Infinite cyclic groups are free groups on single generator. (Of course, all of them are isomorphic to Z)
Yeah. Kind of a boring example, but oh well
Free groups with n > 1 generators are complicated ;)
Complicated in the sense that they are not of the same isomorphism type of any group you know of.
07:49
I figured that'd be the case
I'm taking topology right now btw. I figured you'd like that
But they are important since any group appears as quotient of free groups.
@KajHansen Cool beans.
Metric spaces and whatnots, @Kaj?
Or are you onto general topological spaces already?
Yeah. It looks like we'll be covering a lot of material. We started with metric spaces though.
Interesting. Cayley graphs can also be equipped with a metric. :)
Graphs in general can, lol
Yes, true.
But the metric on cayley graph induces a metric on the group.
so any finitely generated group is a metric space
07:55
Oh cool. And so it's also a topological space.
indeed.
Here's the problem set I'll be working on next week: math.uga.edu/~pete/4200HW_one.pdf
in fact the groups are metric spaces is the single revolutionary idea that was used by Gromov to formalize geometric group theory.
@KajHansen let me look.
Pete's notes are always great ;)
eh, that's not topology @Kaj
Yeah, we're stuck in metric space stuff for the first week or two @BalarkaSen
But that's analysis.
08:01
Sure, but we'll get to the juicy topology soon enough.
I suppose you guys are revising analysis, @Kaj?
Ive never taken a topology class, but Ive seen several video lecture series and lecture notes and such
and they all seem to go over some analysis stuff to start with
Yeah, in a sense. Here's the syllabus if you're interested: math.uga.edu/~pete/4200_syllabus_spring_2015.pdf
I've never studied analysis but I still have been able to study topology @Kevin
Maybe it depends on the book. I used Simmons, and it never touched much of analysis (because it's a book on analysis :P) yet introduced topology in a nice fashion.
Everything's nice except the first two weeks @Kaj :P
Topology over R is epsilons all over. Ugh.
I have faith in Pete. He certainly knows what he's doing, and I enjoy his lectures.
08:08
Yeah Pete is a great guy.
I just have an allergy for R :P
I hate epsilons so much that I always think of continuity by the open-set definition :P
(Of course, that's the right way to think about it for general top. spaces, but I do that in C and R too :P)
I think about both definitions depending on what's most convenient at the time.
Maybe I'd have to study analysis some times soon.
You have quite an open mind, @Kaj.
What makes you say that @BalarkaSen ?
You're studying topology (plus analysis) after studying PDEs and like combinatorics, even though your primary interest is algebra. That's rare.
I studied ODEs, not PDEs. I'll be taking a course in PDEs next year though :P
08:20
Or maybe not rare, but just that I am a narrow-minded prat.
I like to think I'm getting a lot of breadth, but I feel like I don't have much depth either. I'm trying to fix that though.
Grad school is the place to really fix that, honestly
You have more depth than the grad schoolers I study algebraic topology with, @Kaj
So shuddap.
I'm planning on grad school. I just hope a university will take me. My GPA isn't the best, unfortunately.
I have something like a 3.3 right now, mostly because I tend to overload myself with math courses every semester.
What's GPA?
08:24
@BalarkaSen, you are assigned grades at the end of each semester. A, B, C, D, or F. If you get an A, then you earn 4 points. If you get a B, 3 points, and so forth.
Your GPA is the average number of points you've earned.
3.3 should be ok, then, @Kaj.
There's a bit of simplification there. Basically, my "average grade" over all my university coursework is exactly a B+
Maybe. I've been under the impression that grad schools are mostly interested in applicants with >3.5 GPA. I don't really know what I'm talking about though.
You'll be fine. Don't worry about it.
I can't speak for math, but in physics the cutoff is normally closer to 3.0, My GPA was in that 3.3 area and I had a 780 on the physics GRE. Was good enough to get into a couple tier 2 grad schools.
And that was with really only 2 semesters of research experience
I'm fine with a grad school on the same level as UGA or GA Tech. I don't have any internal NEED to get into MIT, e.g.
I accept that I'm not the best mathematician, and I lack the superhuman creativity to be truly great. But I know that I enjoy math, and it's what I want to do for a living.
08:41
Ok so Im trying to do this analysis thing
so if I want to prove $f(x) = x^2$ is continuous
How do these things usually go?
I need to fix $\epsilon > 0$
and then consider a point, say, $x-\delta$ and then demand that $\delta$ be such that $x^2 - (x-\delta)^2 < \epsilon$?
@BalarkaSen, I actually wonder if "preimage of open sets is open" would be easier in this case.
Yes @KevinDriscoll. To say a function is continuous is to say that it is continuous at every point in its domain.
So you not only choose an $\epsilon > 0$, but also some $x \in \mathbb{R}$.
Indeed, so this specific strategy will work?
ah ya, of course, I kinda did that implicitly
It will. I've never actually considered this though, so I'm interested in how it'll turn out.
So let's play around. Expanding that and simplifying, we'll get...
How would you have done the problem? The open sets way?
This way is fine. I've never actually considered the open sets way for a problem like this.
So expanding and simplifying, we'll get $2\delta x - \delta^2$
08:48
@KajHansen WLOG take $\delta > 0$ then $2 x \delta > \delta(2 x - \delta)$
And it's kind of obvious that, making $\delta$ small enough, you can force that to be as small as you like. That is, $\displaystyle \lim_{\delta \rightarrow 0} 2\delta x - \delta^2 = 0$. But you can crunch it out even further to get an appropriate $\delta$ in terms of $\varepsilon$.
So if $\delta < \epsilon/2 x$ then we cna satisfy the condition
Let me check that right quick
That works, yep
Oh, there should be an absolute value
I suppose just to be careful
in case x is negative
Oh sure. You'd have absolute value bars around the original thing.
I.e. we want to find a $\delta$ so that $|x^2 - (x-\delta )^2| < \varepsilon$
Just to belabor things, you want to consider all points $\delta$ distance from $x$, which includes everything between $x$ and $x + \delta$ as well. You're basically done though.
09:02
Well, I made $\delta$ arbitrary to take care of that
Im not sure that suffices though
Remember $\delta$ is strictly positive.
OH, I see what you mean. Yea.
Ultimately it'll come out the exact same way as the original.
I guess one could fix that by considering the distance between $x-\delta$ and $x+\delta$, requiring that to be less than $\epsilon$ and then using the triangle inequality
or rather the distance between the images of those points
wow you folks are still up
09:06
Your $\delta < \varepsilon / 2x$ works. Just see what you get evaluating $|x^2 - (x + \delta)^2|$ with that.
It comes right out.
I'll probably go to sleep in a bit lol
So then to show that this functions is not uniformly continuous, suppose that we have a $\delta$ which works for $x>0$, for $x+n$, $\lvert (x+n)^2 - (x+n + \delta)^2 \rvert = \delta(2n + 2x +\delta)$. So, making $n > \epsilon/2 \delta$ yields a problem. @KajHansen
Yeah. That's essentially the idea @KevinDriscoll. I'm not sure if your specific choice of $n$ is correct, but I suspect $|(x+n)^2 - (x+n+\delta)^2|$ grows without bound as $n \rightarrow \infty$, which indicates that you'll eventually be outside of that $\varepsilon$ range.
For uniform continuity, you assume that you have a $\delta$ that works for all $x$, not just a specific one though. Everything else is fine.
Actually, it's a lot simpler!
@KajHansen Well, I assumed you gave me a $\delta$ for some $x$ and then demonstrated an $x$ for which is does not work.
Which to me sounded easier than doing it by contradiction
Given the $\varepsilon > 0$, suppose you have such a $\delta$ that works for all $x$, and then consider $|x^2 - (x+\delta)^2|$ as $x$ gets large.
and I think my $n$ works because in $n > \epsilon/2\delta$ then $\delta(2n + 2x + \delta) > \epsilon + \delta(2x + \delta) > \epsilon$ so you're in trouble
09:19
I suppose that's basically correct.
The big difference between your thing and mine is that you have some extra terms to keep track of when you square. I think it does work though.
oh ya I suppose you could do it your way and then just pick an $x$ rather than picking an $n$
its the same thing
Ya I guess my physics background get sin the way
For some reason I wanted to keep around the stuff I had before because I already knew some things about it
so I wanted to keep $x$ and $\delta$ and then introduce a new thing
But here because most things are inequalities, its totally unnecessary. You don't need to keep around EXACTLY what you had before.
Alright, gonna go to sleep
glad I cna at least do the simple problems
Good luck!
09:38
@KajHansen not at all. it's a bad way to think about continuity in R.
 
1 hour later…
10:46
Greetings
@KajHansen I have written my idea at the exercise, but I don't know if it is correct...
11:10
@DonLarynx I meant someone like Sharona from Monk. I don't know what @Jasper's OCD motif is but in any case, a human being can be able to help him cope with the stress emotionally. Also, hand him wet napkins after a handshake :D
It's just an idea to help him integrate him back into being an earning member of society.
If he isn't open to this, we can't blame him. It's hard to trust people IRL as much I idealize.
He's one of those resilient people who try to own their own burdens, no matter how heavy it is. And he's dreaming of just one day shedding all his load as opposed to trying to ease his burdens one step at a time.
I hope he does okay in the end. Good people deserve good things.
Get well soon, @Jasper
@Chris'ssis: Greetings to you too :D
@Nick Hello :-)
@Chris'ssis What are you upto?
@Nick I'm creating some stuff and working on my book (that if I'm lucky enough I'll be able to publish it by the end of the year).
@Chris'ssis Oooh. Found a publisher yet?
@Nick Springer
@Nick It also depends on the papers I manage to publish. I still wait for other very nice papers to be published. I don't even mention the problems I proposed to the mathematical magazines (around the world).
11:28
@Chris'ssis You mean Springer Science+Business Media the guys behind Encyclopaedia of Mathematics !?
@Chris'ssis You don't mention the problems because you want the content of your book to be unique?
@Nick Not really. I mentioned some already. I think the first problem in my book will be the first problem Ramanujan submitted to JIMS done in a way that will amaze the audience. :-)
@Chris'ssis I think no matter the contents of your documents, the typesetting, stylization and overall presentation will matter much to the reader. Maybe, not the intended reader but I speak on behalf of readers in general. Who might be editing and/or verifying the contents of your book? Have you left all these details to the publisher?
@Nick I intend each problem in the book has something special, that "wow" element that makes you love it!
11:34
@Nick Thank you.
@Nick Sure, I take into acount all these details. Well, you're right, that's very important, and I already talk with some guys about it, trying to find the best way of doing things. Besides that, the publisher will give you support on this side.
@Nick The hardest part is to make the selection of the problems ... (I have over 10,000 problems ...)
You modify the list again and again and again ... (trying to justify to yourself that it's better this way than the previous way ...)
I'll probably have around 300 problems ... (each having that wow element)
11:52
Hello!!!
12:30
Hi @DanielFischer!!! Could I ask you something? In order to show the commutativity in respect for the addition we show that $n'+m=m+n'$ without the assumption that $m+n=n+m$. When we want to prove that $n'm=mn'$ do we necessarily have to consider that $mn=nm$ ?
@evinda I don't know if it's necessary, but it is not entirely unlikely that it will be convenient.
@DanielFischer I tried to prove it without the assumption that mn=nm and I got the following:
We want to show that $n' \cdot m=m \cdot n'$.

For $m=0$: $n' \cdot 0 \overset{\text{definition}}{=}0 \overset{\text{previous sentence}}{=}0 \cdot n' \checkmark$


We suppose a $m$ such that $n' \cdot m=m \cdot n'$ for all $n \in \omega$.


We want to show that $n' \cdot m'=m' \cdot n'$.

$n' \cdot m'=n' \cdot m+n'=m \cdot n'+n'$
@DanielFischer Is there a way to continue without using this assumption?
@evinda I don't know, would have to think about that. But is there any reason to not use the assumption as part of the induction hypothesis?
@DanielFischer I thought that we firstly show that $0 \cdot m=0$, then that $n' \cdot m=m \cdot n'$ and finally that $m \cdot n=n \cdot m$.
Sorry, I don't see what overall strategy you try to use.
12:40
@DanielFischer At the induction hypothesis don't we assume only that the proposition we want to show is true for a natural number $n$ and then at the induction step we want to show that it is true for n'?
@Chris'ssis: I see that you answered this question almost 2 years ago. I saw the recent duplicate and added a different approach to the old question.
@evinda Yes, that's what we do, but what, precisely, is the proposition you want to show?
@DanielFischer I want to show that $n' \cdot m=m \cdot n'$.
@robjohn Yeah, DCT works nice as well.
That's not precise, @evinda. For one specific $m$, for all $m$?
12:46
@DanielFischer We are given the definition:
For each pair of natural numbers $m \in \omega, n \in \omega$ we define the multiplication between $m,n$ (as a function $\cdot: \omega \times \omega \to \omega$) like that:
$m \cdot 0=0 \\ m \cdot n'=m \cdot n+m$

So in order to show the commutativity we have to show that $0 \cdot m=0$, $n' \cdot m=m \cdot n'$ and that $m \cdot n=n \cdot m$, right?

So in order to show that $n' \cdot m=m \cdot n'$ we show that it holds for $m=0$, then we suppose that it holds for a fixed $m, \forall n \in \omega$ and we want to show that it holds for $m'$.
@Chris'ssis my first thought was that on $[0,1]$, $nx^{n-1}$ is an approximation to $\delta(x-1)$, but before I even noticed that the question was a duplicate, I started thinking about the substitution $x\mapsto x^{1/n}$. $nx^{n-1}$ seemed to be asking for it. I am surprised that no one else had used it in an answer.
@evinda You need to specify the quantifiers. Each proposition you want to prove should contain some $\forall$. Write down (for yourself) precisely which proposition you want to prove in each step of the total proof of commutativity. The strategy should probably contain a nested induction (inductively, for every $m$, you prove by induction that [for every $n$ something involving $m$ and $n$ holds]).
@DanielFischer We want to show that $n' \cdot m=m \cdot n'$.

For $m=0: n' \cdot 0 \overset{\text{definition}}{=}0 \overset{\text{we proves that } 0 \cdot m=0 }{=} 0 \cdot n'$

We suppose a $m$ such that $n' \cdot m=m \cdot n', \forall n \in \omega$

We want to show that $n' \cdot m'=m' \cdot n'$.

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