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15:05
OK,iam not getting
So for first digit 4 we get 0100
yes
Then for 2nd digit 3 which is 48
no
?
16×3=?
the point is to treat each digit separately
4 is 0100
3 is 0011
2 is 0010
1 is 0001
join them together and you get 0001-0010-0011-0100 (hyphens just for readibility)
so you get 1001000110100
15:09
okay, I think I understand integration by parts now
16×3=48 so it is 32+16 so in binary …?
@heather nice
@Ramanujan $48_{10} = 110000_{2}$
and I woke up early this morning and taught myself about limits
so I think I can do this pretty well now.
@heather self-learning!
what did you learn about limits?
@DHMO OK,so I got that in base 10
That's the point?
15:10
@DHMO, what they meant and how to calculate them
@Ramanujan ??
and about right and left limits
@heather so you learnt the formal definition of limits?
@DHMO, I don't know, I don't think so? when I said what they mean, I meant intuitively
@heather I see. That's nice. Building a intuition is a good thing to do.
Would you evaluate $\lim\limits_{x\to1}x^3$?
15:12
well, that'd be 1, right?
yes
what about $\lim\limits_{x\to1}\dfrac{x^2-1}{x-1}$?
@DHMO ?double limits?
@Ramanujan ??
1 min ago, by DHMO
Would you evaluate $\lim\limits_{x\to1}x^3$?
@Ramanujan "double limits" means right limit and left limit?
15:14
@DHMO 2, I think
@heather why?
Yes,2
Hiiii
@Mahmoud hi. how is your revision?
@DHMO, well, you can rewrite the top as (x+1)(x-1) and then the x-1's cancel, so you are left with x+1, where you can just plug in 1, and then you have 2
15:15
@heather brilliant.
It seems like whatever I do isn't enough @DHMO
@heather what about $\lim\limits_{x\to1}\dfrac{\sqrt x-1}{x-1}$?
@Mahmoud have you encountered difficult problems?
@DHMO that's my favorite one!
Let's see if Heather will figure out with himself for first time
@DHMO No, but I'm still horrible at proof-writing.
@Mahmoud what is your major difficulty in proof-writing?
15:19
@Mahmoud can I know in which class you are?
@DHMO @robjohn Could you take a look at the edit part of my question? math.stackexchange.com/questions/2022192/limit-of-sequence
@DHMO I'm not sure if I did one step right, is it 1/2, or do...hmm, no I think I have to switch to the third type of limit there, so I have to evaluate the left and right integral, and then those both give 2, so I think the answer is 2.
Yeah, I think the answer is 2.
@MaryStar $a_{n_{k_j}}$ lol
@heather integral?
@heather nope
@DHMO, lol, I meant limit
15:21
@DHMO I doubt he can't do for very first
@heather can you explain how you get 2?
@Ramanujan let her try again
@DHMO Is this wrong?
@MaryStar no, just that the amount of subscripts is funny
@DHMO, well, okay, I rationalized the numerator, so I got x-1 over (x-1)($\sqrt{x}$+1), and then the x-1's cancel, so I got 1 over $\sqrt{x}$+1 and then I wasn't sure what to do. Either evaluate it by just plugging in, in which case you get 1/2, or by using left and right limits, because it is a different type of limit now. If you do the second way, you evaluate the right limit of 1 over sqrt x +1 and get two, and then left limit of 1 over sqrt x +1 and get 2, so it must be defined giving 2.
@MaryStar what is it you're asking ?
15:25
@DHMO I don't even know how to start the proof.
@heather you're almost there. How does the right limit of $\dfrac1{\sqrt{x}+1}$ get 2?
I want to show that a sequence $(a_n)_{n=1}^{\infty}$ converges to $a\in \mathbb{R}$ iff each subsequence $(a_{n_k})_{k=1}^{\infty}$ of $(a_n)_{n=1}^{\infty}$ has a subsequence $(a_{n_{k_j}})_{j=1}^{\infty}$ that converges to $a$. @Astyx
@Mahmoud well, then proof-writing isn't the problem. the problem is you don't know how to prove a statement
Can you tell me the definition of subset?
@DHMO, well, we are basically taking sqrts of numbers just above 1, like 1.0001, and then adding 1. and this approaches 2 as x gets closer and closer to 1; I used a calculator to double check.
oh, wait, no that's wrong
@heather you verified that $\sqrt x+1$ approaches $2$, but not $\dfrac1{\sqrt x+1}$
15:27
@MaryStar I suggest showing the opposite
@DHMO, okay, well then the right limit approaches 1/2, right?
@heather yes
A subset B of a set A is another set who"s elements are all contained in the set A. @DHMO ?
and then I did the same thing wrong on the left side
so it would also be 1/2
@Mahmoud you are not taught symbols?
15:27
so the right answer would be 1/2? @DHMO
@heather yes, so you knew how to do it all along
$A \subset B$
stupid errors haunt me wherever I go =P
@Mahmoud the definition of subset using symbols
15:28
@heather what about $\dfrac{\sqrt[3]x-1}{x-1}$?
what does x approach, @DHMO? 1 again?
@heather oops, stupid mistakes on my account; yes.
okay
@heather @DHMO why I loved that problem was my teacher wrote denominator as (√x + 1 ) (√x - 1) and cancelled √x - 1 so by plugging in x we got 1/2
$A \subset B=\{\forall x : x \in A \implies x \in B\}$
15:30
@Mahmoud your curriculum does have a special way to avoid using $\forall$
@Astyx What do you mean?
@Mahmoud no, that isn't correct.
Now ?
@MaryStar showing that a sequence does not converge to a iff each of its subsequence has no subsequence converging to a
@Mahmoud still not correct
you used set comprehension notation
$A \subset B := \forall x : x \in A \implies x \in B$
15:33
@Astyx Is this what I shown at the direction $\Rightarrow$ ?
@DHMO 1/2 again I think
@heather why?
well, same sort of thing, rationalized, canceled, got 1 over cube root of x +1, then the left and right limit, and it approaches 1/2 in both cases so the original is 1/2
did I get it wrong?
@heather can you show the step of rationalization?
yeah, sure I did the original times the cube root of x +1 over the cube root of x +1 and got x-1 over (x-1)(cube root of x +1)
15:35
@MaryStar what I mean is that I would do the opposite of what you did : if $(a_n)$ converges to a then each of its subsequence converges to a, and then each subsequence oviously has a subsequence that converges to a, which prove $\implies$

Then suppose that $(a_n)$ does not converge to a, use what this means to create a subsequence that does not have any subsequence that converges to a
@heather so $(\sqrt[3]x-1)(\sqrt[3]x+1) = x-1$?
well, the two middle terms cancel out but I'm guessing i did the first term wrong, cube root of x * cube root of x $\neq$ x
Let $E$ be an non-empty set, why is $E \times \emptyset =\emptyset$ ? @DHMO
just put it in a calculator and it gave (cube root of x)^2
darn, so I did the whole thing wrong
@Mahmoud use the definition of $\times$ and the definition of $\varnothing$
15:38
@Mahmoud can you give me an element in $E \times \emptyset$?
No because there is no elements in $\emptyset$ to pair with @SteamyRoot
There you go.
@Mahmoud so you know how to prove it intuitively. now can you write a formal proof?
That's my issue @DHMO, maybe use the proof by contradiction ?
suppose that $(a_n)$ does not converge to a then there are at east two limit points, ie., two different subsequences converge to a different point, say a and b.
This means that the subsequence that converge to b does not have any subsequence that converge to a. Is this correct?
15:39
@Mahmoud how would you proceed?
Can you recall the definitions of $\times$ and $\varnothing$?
@DHMO $\int sin^4 t \: dt$, Euler??
Yes, $\emptyset$ is the set with no elements.
@Mahmoud formally?
@DHMO, I'm not completely sure how to solve that one then...I can't think of an algebraic manipulation that would work there.
@heather do you know the difference of cubes?
@Lozansky that would be troublesome
consider using the double angle formula
15:41
@DHMO, no, I don't, let me google it real quick
Okay, $\emptyset=\{x| x \not= x\}$
@Mahmoud brilliant.
now what is the definition of $\times$?
Hello!!! We have that $c(x) \leq -c_0<0$.

I have shown that $u(x) \leq \frac{f(x_0)}{c(x_0)}$.

I think that it does not hold that $u(x) \leq \frac{\max f(x)}{-c_0}$ since $\frac{1}{c(x_0)} \geq \frac{1}{-c_0}$. Do you agree?
@DHMO, okay, I've got some idea now I think
@heather nice
15:42
The set of all pairs $(x,y)$ such that $x\in E$ and $y\in \emptyset$
If you don't like cubes, just substitute them away :P
@DHMO But maybe I don't understand it well enough, because I'm not sure how it helps
@Mahmoud and formally?
@heather read the comment above you
@MaryStar yes it is
@heather I guess you would like to learn the substitution rule in limits
15:44
@DHMO, that might be good, yeah. Okay, I'll look that up.
Hi @Astyx
Did you see my question?
No
Hi
Oh now I did
We have that $c(x) \leq -c_0<0$.

I have shown that $u(x) \leq \frac{f(x_0)}{c(x_0)}$.

I think that it does not hold that $u(x) \leq \frac{\max f(x)}{-c_0}$ since $\frac{1}{c(x_0)} \geq \frac{1}{-c_0}$. Do you agree?
$E \times \emptyset=\{(x,y)|x\in E \land y\in \emptyset\}$
But $y\in \emptyset \implies y\not=y$
Contradiction ?
@Mahmoud therefore?
15:46
So is $E \times \emptyset$ undefined or equal to $\emptyset$ ?
@Mahmoud it isn't undefined
But the contradiction ...
@Lozansky $\sin^4(t) = \frac{3 - 4\cos(2t) + \cos(4t)}{8}$
you could argue that $\{x|x\ne x\}$ contains a contradiction as well? @Mahmoud
@Evinda It does not mean it does not hold, only that what you have done is not sufficient to prove it (nor sufficient to disprove it)
15:48
@SteamyRoot Who remembers that?
:D
@Lozansky don't you ?
@Lozansky You remember the simple formulas and use them to derive it :P
Ah ok... Thank you very much!! :-) @Astyx
Oh that's right @DHMO
@MaryStar My pleasure !
Use De Moivre to get it almost instantly
15:49
It is the definition of the $\emptyset$ itself, thanks :D
@Mahmoud you are welcome
so you learnt how to prove results using their very definitions
The prof just wrote the definition down.
@Astyx What other condition would be needed?
@Mahmoud the point is that the condition would hold for no object
so that the set would contain no object
Exactly @DHMO :)
15:51
@Astyx such innequalities can never lead you to this result. But you could study $u(x)$ to get more info
@Mahmoud an equivalent definition is of course $\varnothing := \{x|\bot\}$
What is that symbol ?
We have that $Lu=f(x) \text{ in } \Omega \\ u|_{\partial{\Omega}}=0$.
$L$ is an elliptic operator @Astyx
@Mahmoud it means "contradiction", but you can just view it as the symbol for the truth value "false"
And what do you want to prove ?
15:54
Ok, @DHMO
@Mahmoud can I know in which class you are?
@Mahmoud Prove that there is no bijection between $X$ and $\mathscr P(X)$ where $X \ne \varnothing$.
@DHMO I'm finding no explanation for this that makes sense.
@Ramanujan I don't really known because I'm probably in a different country than you.
just as a side question, is it okay to, for that limit, substitute 1 in for some spots there is x but not all of them? Or no, is that not okay?
15:56
@Mahmoud are you from India?
In general, that's very dangerous
@SteamyRoot, so...no?
@DHMO What exactly is $\mathscr P(X)$
@Mahmoud the power set of $X$
@Ramanujan No.
15:56
@heather that is not okay
@heather no
okay
I know but how do we define it explicitly ? @DHMO
@heather well, then don't use it?
@Astyx That $\min \{ 0, \frac{\min_{\Omega} f(x)}{-c_0} \leq u(x) \leq \max \{ 0, \frac{\max_{\Omega} f(x)}{-c_0} \}$.

I tried to show the second inequality first.

If the maximum of u is achieved at the boundary, it is equal to 0.

Suppose that the maximum is achieved at some $x_0 \in \Omega$.

Then we have $Lu(x_0)=\sum_{i,j=1}^n a_{ij}u_{x_ix_j}(x_0)+cu(x_0)=f(x_0)$ and thus $c(x_0) u(x_0) \geq f(x_0)$.

From this we get that $u(x) \leq u(x_0) \leq \frac{f(x_0)}{c(x_0)} \leq \max_{\Omega} \frac{f(x)}{c(x)}$.
15:57
@Mahmoud does your test include power sets?
$\mathcal{P}(X)$ i saw more often
@Mahmoud The set of all subsets of $X$.
@DHMO but then how do I solve that limit?
@Null I see
@DHMO Yes.
15:57
But can we use somehow the fact that $c(x) \leq -c_0<0$ in $\overline{\Omega}$ ? @Astyx
@heather substitute $x=u^3$
Like the problem you saw yesterday.
@Evinda Yes
@Mahmoud $\mathscr P(X) := \{Y|Y\subseteq X\}$
Because you have that these number are negative
15:58
@Mahmoud the proof is quite beautiful
@DHMO, which would be basically the cube root of 1^3, you mean? you can do that?
Show me please !
@heather I don't understand.
would you prefer in multilineequations the "=" at the end of the lines or at the beginning?
@Mahmoud This proves a stronger result, i.e. no surjection from set to power set

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