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11:01
@JankoBracic I think you must wait at least 2 days.
11:47
@DanielFischer Hello!!!
Suppose that we have the following AVL-tree and want to delete 19:
@DanielFischer Will the result be the following?
Or am I wrong?
@user91500 Thank you! I guess that you are right, that one needs to wait 2 days.
12:20
I'm away for some hours, I visit some relatives.
(not too much time for math these days - unfortunately)
Then I deleted 4 and I got this:
and then I deleted 56 and got this:
Could you tell me if it is right? Because in my lecture notes, there are different results... :/
13:20
@evinda That's one possibility. One could also implement deletion of a node with two children such that the largest node in the left subtree replaces the deleted, then it would look different (after replacing, you'd then need rotations to make it an AVL tree again). Your trees after the further deletions look fine to me. How do the results in your lecture notes look?
13:31
@DanielFischer So does this mean that the result depend on which node we choose to replace with the one that we want to delete? These are the results in my lecture notes:
@DanielFischer I think that they deleted first other nodes.. I will try it again...
@evinda In particular the last looks like they use a completely different deletion algorithm. Of course, if one uses different algorithms, different results are to be expected.
13:52
@DanielFischer I retried it... At each step except from the last one, I get the same result..
After having deleted 4, we have this tree:
Then after deleting 56, I get this tree:
and the result of my lecture notes is this one:
@DanielFischer Is my result also right?
@evinda Different algorithm for deletion. Look at how deletion is described in your lecture notes.
Both results are AVL trees, so both are correct in that sense.
@DanielFischer Initially, we follow the known algorithm of deletion in a binary tree:
1)deletion of the node v itself, if it is a leaf.
2)replacement with its child if it has only one.
3)replacement with its next in the in-order traversal if it has two children.
Balance
- If 1) or 2) the balance of the parent node w of v changes.
- If 3) the balance of the parent node w of the next of v in the in-order traversal changes.
@evinda Okay, so we're in case 3, and the next node in the in-order traversal is 90. For some reason, in the lecture notes, a left rotation was done, although that isn't necessary to have an AVL tree. Don't ask me why.
@DanielFischer A ok.. So my result is correct, right? :)
14:10
@evinda Correct in the sense that you get a valid AVL tree. If a specific deletion strategy is prescribed, it may be incorrect in that sense.
@DanielFischer At the beginning of the algorithm, it says that "we check the whole path from w till the root and for each node of this path that has balance +2 or -2 after the deletion, maybe rotations will be needed as follows... "
But in our case the node with key 56 is the root.. :/
That makes for a short path. So you'd check whether the root node has, after deletion, a balance of $\pm 2$, find that it doesn't, and hence should not rotate.
So we just have to replace 56 with 90, right? @DanielFischer
And remove the old 90 node.
@DanielFischer May I ask why you did not become a mathematician?
14:22
Yes :) Thanks a lot!!!
@ABeautifulMind I don't think there's a law against asking. Can't give much of an answer, though, it just didn't work out that way.
@DanielFischer I see. My life also did not work out as planned. I am still struggling with mental illness, and this will be my 9th year of not working.
14:42
@ABeautifulMind see here
@ABeautifulMind humiliate your every single negative thought by a positive one.
@Chris'ssis hi! so you're now a motivational speaker? : P
Never accept to be down!
@user153330 hello (well, once in a while ;))
@Chris'ssis btw i think this mate is the best motivational speaker on math.SE
:) How to type LateX quickly? When I edit my answer on Mathstackexchange, it usually takes 20 min .
@user153330 Well, I see things approximately the same.
15:01
hella @N3buchadnezzar
how're ya?
^^^ @BalarkaSen
^^^ @TedShifrin you want kill me right?
@user153330 he doesn't seem to be there...
15:19
@Ramanewbie are you sure?
@user153330 I can't see his avatar on the list on the right of the page.
@Ramanewbie when he logs in he'll see the message : )
@user153330 I bet so... ^^
@Ramanewbie as you say baby hippa
@user153330 "baby hippa" lol, eveyone calls me like this -_-
15:29
@user153330 Heya, just back from Africa
@N3buchadnezzar what were you doing in africa? : o which country btw?
Sitting on the train back now. Been traveling for almost 24 hours :p
@user153330 Zanzibar (Tanzania), how are you btw?
@N3buchadnezzar great for the moment
Hello =) We have an equation of degree 3 in a field K. Can this equation have only two roots in K?
@N3buchadnezzar For me, travelling is a waste of time and money. =)
15:33
@user153330 Me too, writing on the train is always fin
*fun
@N3buchadnezzar Are you going to be a mathematician?
@user153330 Me too, writing on the train is always fin
*fun
@ABeautifulMind Huh?
@ABeautifulMind Meh :p
@N3buchadnezzar it must be a very comfortable train then :p
@N3buchadnezzar Then what will you do when you graduate?
@ABeautifulMind Start working, earn money, be happy :p
@user153330 It is rough as a cactus bottom
15:37
@N3buchadnezzar OK. I can no longer be happy in my country.
@N3buchadnezzar lol
@ABeautifulMind change the country
@user153330 So why did you ask me for the book recommendation?
@user153330 :p
@N3buchadnezzar Your hotel?
@N3buchadnezzar so you were climbing those trees?
@ABeautifulMind i don't see the relation
15:40
@user153330 There is no relation. We are just making conversation.
@ABeautifulMind what is the relatioon between "book recommandation" and changing the country
@user153330 I said there is no relation.
@ABeautifulMind okay, i asked thta since you are knowledgeable in that field
@user153330 It's just weird to me, since you weren't asking about a specific field.
@ABeautifulMind Yeah, pretty nice. Traveling can be fun, if it is on one's own merits.
15:42
@N3buchadnezzar Have you found a girl?
@user153330 There were actually coconuts in them, apperntly they had quite a few incidents in the "coconut season"
@ABeautifulMind No meat, no pudding ;)
@N3buchadnezzar What incidents?
@ABeautifulMind No meat, no pudding ;)
@N3buchadnezzar Don't you already have the meat?
@ABeautifulMind Slow net on the train, yeah I guess you could say I have half of it.
@ABeautifulMind You know people getting hit by coconuts
15:44
@N3buchadnezzar You don't need meat. You just need a banana.
@ABeautifulMind and a mango
@user153330 LOL
Sante sana squash banana
16:02
Could someone help me at this:

We have an equation of degree 3 in a field K. Can this equation have only two roots in K?

?
16:17
Could someone explain this to me, as in why the x+2 is not multiplied by -1? goo.gl/u2xVO0
@robjohn I'm preparing to upload the problem L+3. Please check it when you're back.
16:34
@JoeStavitsky $-\frac1{x+2}=\frac1{-(x+2)}$
16:48
@robjohn I think I used "right" word instead of "left" word. I make the correction and upload again.
Hello!! When we have that $$f(4)=f(-4)=7.5 \\ f(-3)=f(3)=2.25 \\ f(-2)=f(2)=-1.5 \\ f(-1)=f(1)=-3.75 \\ f(0)=-4.5$$ how can we find the function f??
@MaryStar Do you know that the function is a polynomial?
@robjohn done
@KevinDriscoll It is a parabola.
@MaryStar Well then we know an important detail, that $f$ can be written as $a x^2 + bx +c$
@MaryStar So how are these values you've written down related to the function I just wrote out?
17:06
@KevinDriscoll So, using the values I have written above we have to find the values of $a, b, c$, right??
@marystar Indeed
@user159870: assume that a polynomial in K has degree 3 and exactly 2 roots. Then it factors into two linear factors and something else
in K that is
er, K[x]
say we have (x-a)(x-b)g for some g whose form we don't know
well, (x-a) and (x-b) both have degree 1, and we know that deg x-a + deg x-b + deg g = 3
so deg g = 1
meaning it's linear, a contradiction
since then g can be written as (ignoring some constant factor) x-c for some c in K
@user153330: I am extremely fond of applications, so no anger for that here. Besides, there's differential geometry in one of the frames :P
hi @Kevin @Chris'ssis @MaryStar
@TedShifrin Hello. How are you doing?
HOwdy @Ted
17:16
Hello @TedShifrin.
Quite well, thanks, @Chris'ssis. You buried in integrals?
hi @Jasper
@TedShifrin Whatever I change my name to, you always use @jasper, lol.
@TedShifrin Not really. I'm working on limits with nested radicals (from my research). :-)
Yes, @Jasper. I'm an old dog.
BBIAB
Mi
*Hi
Wow, off to a good start.
17:22
hi
How are you guys?
the usual basically. so like, just doing assignment after assignment
you?
I'm great :D
I need a hand with naming a shape...
Is that on topic here?
I'd guess it probably is
Morning, @Ted.
17:25
Well, Imagine a torus, made up of trepezoids, in a hexagonal shape
Like this:
THere
I would probably call that a toroidal polyhedon with 24 quadrilateral faces.
Now imagine two hexagons covering the hole, top and battom,
*bottom
making it a flat shape, well, idk if that even makes sense.
Oh, I see.
I understand what you mean.
I don't know what I'd call such a thing. I'd probably just describe it.
@user91500 ty
so it's got 2 hexagonal faces and 12 4-sided ones?
17:28
Yup
ya its an irregular polyhedron with 14 faces so unlikely to have a name
Oh ok
@JoeStavitsky yw
name it whatever you want
The thing you're building is homeomorphic to a 2-sphere, if that helps.
17:28
that's what I'd do
It's the shape of a building in one of my short stories
and I wanted it to be accurate
But thanks :D
well be aware of your audience, right
I think a jewler is more likely to hav a name for that shape than a mathematician
The reader would definitely appreciate a description rather than a mathematical name.
if you didn't know the terminology what's the likelihood they will
17:30
Fair point...
in other news linear programming is an unexpectedly cool subject
Ok @KevinDriscoll Thank you!! :-)
Hello @TedShifrin :-)
So @SamuelYusim either the polynomial has 1 root or 3 roots. Correct?
nope, it could also have 0
17:45
Oh ok! So the possible number of roots are 0,1,3. Thanks @SamuelYusim !
no problemo
crl
crl
18:32
f(x) =
\begin{cases}
x, & \text{if }x \in [-180,180] \\
x+360, & \text{if }x \in [-360,-180] \\
x-360, & \text{if }x \in [180,360]
\end{cases}
Is there a simple formula, without cases, for this function?
I'm thinking of something with modulus
@crl There is, but it's pretty much the same ...
@crl Something like $f(x)=x\cdot\dfrac{\max(0,180-x)+1}{\max(0,180-x)+1}+\dots$
Well, not that one, which doesn't work. But kind of.
You get the idea.
crl
crl
@Hippalectryon I was thinking of $f(x) = ((x+180) \% 360 ) - 180$
That wouldn't work.
mod only returns positive numbers, doesnt it?
Modulos would still give you increasing fonctions, not constants.
crl
crl
18:45
sorry edited, and % is modulus I didn't find the mathjax command for it
@KevinDriscoll yes
@crl Your original function jumps from -180 to +180 at x=-180 but your mod version doesnt do that
@crl This looks like a sawtootch function though, so you could reresent it as the Fourier Transform of a single function
without cases
I think
Or equivalently, use a fourier series
crl
crl
ok I think my solution was wrong too
weird, the modulus can take negative values: fooplot.com/…
@crl I think that depends on how you implement the modulus functions
that way its defined, it should be positive definite, I think
crl
crl
@KevinDriscoll indeed, the plotter uses the truncated division, not theEuclidean one en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modulo_operation
hmm I really need a formula because the input domain might be larger than [-360, 360]
19:10
@crl If you compute the fourier series that will give it to you over the whole domain
I mean all of $\mathbb{R}$ because its periodic
19:37
Hello, I have a small question i have a topological space $(\N,\tau)$ where $\tau=\{\emptyset,,\mathbb{N},\mathbb{N}^*, \{A_n\}_{n\in\mathbb{N^*}}\}$, $A_n=\{1,2,....,n\}$ and we consider the set $A=\{2n, n\in \mathbb{N}^*\}$ I want to find $\overline{A}$ and $\overset{º}{A}$ and $A'$
I found $\overline{A}=\mathbb{N}\setminus\{1\}, A'=\mathbb{N}\setminus\{1,2\}, \overset{º}{A}=\emptyset, Fr(A)= \overline{A}$ is it true ?
tcp
tcp
hello, i am computing p(a) = $$ \sum_b\sum_c\sum_d\sum_e\sum_f\phi(a,b)*\phi(a,c)*\phi(b,d)*\phi(c,e)*\phi(b,e,f‌​)$$. What is the computational complexity if I naively sum it up given each variable can take r values? Ans given is r^6.
@Vrouvrou What is $Fr$ ?
@tcp Mind explaining your notations ? What's, for instance, the complexity of calling once $\phi(x,y)$ ?
19:53
@Hippalectryon the boundary
@Vrouvrou What's the difference between $boundary(A)$ and $(\bar A)$ then ? To me, it means the same.
tcp
tcp
It is a negative potential function used for calculating marginal probability. Author wants to stress more on the way multiple summations should be carried out to reduce computational complexity than the function. In his own words "Naively, if each of these sums is applied to summand involving six variables computational complexity scales as $$r^6$$ "
@Hippalectryon it is $\overline{A}\setminus \overset{º}{A}$
@Vrouvrou Oh you're right, I'm mistaken :)
20:07
@TedShifrin Hallo.
hallo @Pedro
Hello, @Pedro and @Ted.
hi @Lord
crl
crl
@Hippalectryon la frontière et l'adhérence :)
How are you doing?
20:10
@crl En effet, j'avais confondu les notations :-)
crl
crl
I think there are cases where they are different, but I may be wrong, it's so far away
@Lord_Farin Hoi, Flour Lord
Les jeunes doivent ne pas confondre :P
crl
crl
tout à fait
@Hippalectryon Hello, my Nilpferd :).
crl
crl
20:11
soy un viejo, ahora, 29
@Lord_Farin Hehe
was ist ein Nilpferd?
@TedShifrin You would describe it as "hippopotamus".
ah :)
hipp_o_ au lieu d'hipp_a_ :D
@TedShifrin I heard you got attacked by a wild baby hippa
20:14
You should make him a stronger leash, @Hippa.
2
silently laughts
you're rarely silent about anything, @Hippa.
So, @Pedro, now that you've abandoned cats, what are you working on?
Hello, please i have three sets $X\subset Y\subset Z$ what it means $X,Y,Z$ are homotopically equivalent ?
@TedShifrin I have to prepare two final exams. I kinda finished writing some notes on the structure theorem for modules over PIDs, and decided to read some more of Ireland and Rosen's book.
ah, reverting to your old number theory ways ... good, get those final exams over with :)
20:17
@Vrouvrou Tried WikiPedia?
@TedShifrin I do want to continue with Remmert's second volume too.
Since I have to prepare complex analysis, too.
yes, good, so you can learn that last problem on my exam :P
@DanielFischer I am looking at the following exercise:
Assume that at the nodes of a 2-3 tree, the following keys are saved (in an increasing order): $3,6,9,15,18,21,24, 27, 30, 33, 36$.

It is also given that the root is a 2-node that contains the number $12$.


Draw the tree.


PS: It is not required to make so many insertions as the above keys in an initially empty 2-3 tree. It is just required to draw only one tree that is a 2-3 tree and that contains the above keys at its nodes(which you have to decide if they should be 2-nodes or 3-nodes).
Could you tell me if it is right?
Hehe, yes.
I've already forgotten what it said.
@evinda I know nothing about 2-3 trees.
20:21
A ok @DanielFischer
I'm the forgetful one, @Pedro.
It was a power series expansion, and you were supposed to prove the function took on every value infinitely often, @Pedro.
hi @DanielF
@TedShifrin Ah, OK.
Hi @Ted.
tcp
tcp
20:35
@v
@Lord_Farin it means that there existe two homotopy $F_1:[0,1]\times X\rightarrow Y$ such that $F_1(0,x)=f\circ g(x)$ and $F_1(1,x)=id_{Y} (u)$ right ?
tcp
tcp
@Vrouvrou can u help me?
@tcp i don't know what is your problem ?
tcp
tcp
i am computing p(a) = $$ \sum_b\sum_c\sum_d\sum_e\sum_f\phi(a,b)*\phi(a,c)*\phi(b,d)*\phi(c,e)*\phi(b,e,f‌​‌​)$$. What is the computational complexity if I naively sum it up given each variable can take r values
@Vrouvrou There must exist homotopies $H_X$ between $g \circ f$ and $id_X$ and $H_Y$ between $f \circ g$ and $id_Y$.
20:40
@Lord_Farin for the first it is right ?
I don't understand you :(.
@tcp sorry i can't help you
tcp
tcp
is there a chat room for probability folks?
is $H_Y=F_1$ @Lord_Farin ?
20:42
@ModdedBear +1
@Vrouvrou Yes, except that you wrote the domain of $F_1$ is $[0,1]\times X$, and supplied arguments indicating the same.
@Vrouvrou thanks, although I don't know why it would get downvoted
@ModdedBear Life sucks.
fair enough
@Lord_Farin what must be the domain of $F_1$ ?
20:44
Well, if it is to be a homotopy involving $id_Y$, it ought to be $F_1: [0,1] \times Y \to Y$, right?
@robjohn how would you characterize that nested radical limit? It's created by me. I personally think it would be a nice problem for my book.
oh ok
@Lord_Farin $H_X$ must be defined from $[0,1]\times X\rightarrow X$ right ?
@Vrouvrou Indeed.
thank you
You're welcome :).
20:53
Does anybody know some good book (except Matrix Analysis from Rajendra Bhatia) that deals with unitary invariant norm and their relation with antisymmetric tensors product on Hilbert spaces?
This sounds like physics!
Well, I don't know physics. Yes, as far I know physicists are working with antysimmetric tensor product, but that is not my main interest for studing, more p-norm, unitary invariant norm and some inequalities about that (oh, my splendid English)
@Lord_Farin please even if $Y\subset X$ $H_Y: [0,1]\times Y\rightarrow Y$ ?
21:08
@Vrouvrou Yes. It's the general definition, so it's best to stick to it, even if $Y$ lies within $X$ (so that $H_Y$ has a natural interpretation with codomain $X$ as well).
This way you prevent errors, e.g. when you don't know $Y$ is a subset.
Please if $Y\subset X$ is this homotopy give me a deformation or any topological information about this sets ?
@Lord_Farin
@Vrouvrou Well, I think it tells you that the restriction of $f$ to $Y$ is homotopic to the identity $Y$. (Presuming that $g$ is the inclusion.)
But it's been a while since I studied homotopies properly, so I may not be the most authoritative person you could ask.
21:25
Interestingly, the views on my meta thread seem to explode after it has been locked.
Oooo, I just came across another amazing nested radical.
@Chris'ssis Nested radicals are awesome.
@Lord_Farin Yeah, especially when they come from personal research. :-)
Cool :).
@Lord_Farin :D
21:29
hey @Chris'ssis
@user153330 Hello
@Chris'ssis so how are you? you seem to be as creative as always : )
@Lord_Farin Every time I find something very nice I feel myself closer and closer to Ramanujan. My book will also be dedicated to Ramanujan.
@Chris'ssis :)
@Chris'ssis and to hippa...
21:31
@user153330 Hello. Yes, indeed. :-)
@user153330 haha, yeap ;)
@user153330 has @ted seen it yet ?
@user153330 hahahaha, mathemafu**ers :-))))
@Ramanewbie yep, you were right, he isn't the killer
@Chris'ssis lmao
@user153330 you mean ted isn't the killer ?
21:36
@Ramanewbie yup
@user153330 he's not here, but I don't know if he'ld be happy hearing that -_-
if someone know the answer please give it
@vrouvrou how did, d'you know ?
@Vrouvrou My guess is that if you know the equation is true then the question isn't research level
ie you must have read it in some book or paper or something
but thats just a guess
i read it in a an application in a paper
but i must prove it
and i don't find the proof in any book
21:42
I figured it was something like that. Im no mathoverflow expert.
I would add the reference though so other can see the stated equality in context
as you want
@Vrouvrou Iw would also answer Fernando's question. You know the equality holds because you read it in a paper.
@Ramanewbie i think he's the one who was killed :/
@KevinDriscoll i added the ref
@NajibIdrissi who is cécile thiébaut for you?
21:57
@Lord_Farin in the memory of Ramanujan
Should the brackets stop before the second $+$?
@Lord_Farin No.
@Chris'ssis Hm, interesting.

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