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13:01
Hi from Korea
@kayak 아녕하세요
@kayak How is the new leader going? Do you like Kim Jong Un better than the last one?
Hahaha @Sophie
안녕하세요
that's a bunch of squares
My leader is impeached.
13:03
@kayak 한국인이에요?
Court is waiting for her.
Yes I'm I'm the one who was talking to you
@kayak 하씨?
Yes.
:o
So many friends of mine is doing this MSE
haha.
I don't like both kim jung un and the last one.
13:05
When you have your paper Möbius strip cut it along the middle, but first try to guess how many rings you'll get and if they'll be linked together or free @sophie
@kayak 이름 왜 달라요?
(Just in case you needed more ways to procrastinate :P)
My name? @DHMO
@kayak 예
My name is Heonjin Ha. It's same.
Nick name in MSE is kayak
13:07
how do you say "nickname"?
In korea?
yes
별명 or we say 'nickname'
I see
@kayak so "이름" is only for the real name?
Yes.
13:09
how do you say "name" in general then?
what's difference btwn name and real name haha
well nick name is also a name
no korean word for 'general' name. I think.
I see
Oh
for publish area
public area we use 성함
like in Office, in passport
이름 can be used for general one.
13:12
What about 성명?
Oh, I have a question about Korean grammar
@kayak in Facebook, "view comments" become "XXX 보기". Why do we use "보기"?
this is art
The boundary of the moebius strip is indeed homeomorphic to a cirlce
@Secret a trefoil knot is also homeomorphic to a circle
13:13
@DHMO haha that's really funny thing
@kayak I'm serious
성명=성함
I see
Are you english origin?
no
13:14
I mean mother toughning adsoifjasopi
bad english
I have
Then do you know 한자?
Now that I can finally twist the ordinary moebius stripe mentally into the sudanese one, it should not be too hard to visualise the real projective plane
@kayak 홍콩사람이에요
Chiness characters?
Ohhhh
There was MaMa concert in 홍콩
안 봤어 :/
Ok haha
보기 is from 보다=view
maybe 보기=viewing=seeing
13:15
모르고 볼 수 없었어
모르고, and 볼 수 없었어?
@kayak so my question is why we use "보기" instead of something like "봅니다"
@kayak yes
@Alessandro More interesting questions for procrastination: If you have a knot or a link in R^3 (embedded circle), an orientable surface (2-manifold with boundary) which has that as the boundary is called a Siefert surface. Can you see what the Siefert surface of the Hopf link (google for picture) is? What the Siefert surface of trefoil knot is?
@DHMO 봅니다=I see=see(command or order to someone)
보기=viewing(noun)
why do we use the noun here?
13:17
lolll
Your question is keen haha
maybe "보십시오" should be used?
You can think like that I know that.
Lollll
하씨도 몰라요?
You r right.
You can think like that, I know that.
I forgot to put colon here
I know that.
보십시오 can be used. It's really good one and very respectful.
I mean, 왜 "보기"인 게, 하씨도 몰라요?
just that the noun feels strange
13:20
I know why they use '보기' instead of '보십시오'
you won't say "viewing XX comments"
@kayak why?
Yes noun feels strange.
I guess : Facebook used translator haha
I don't know what the hopf link or the treefoil knot are @Balarka, I'll look them up later, I'm supposed to be studying numerical analysis now...
Ah, sure.
@kayak 생각 않아요...
13:21
And people don't like to use 'long' word.
보기 is short.
Let's see = 보자 is short but not respectful.
보십시오
보십시오 : too respectful.
보세요?
Oh 보세요 is good.haha
You r better than me.
what
Oh.
I just started learning Korean 6 months ago lol
13:23
보기 has 'If you want to see, click this'
보세요 has 'look at this'
@kayak 보면?
보면 = 'if you see
so "보기 (싶으면)"?
Yes!
but....
13:24
You really good
we say 보고 instead...
???
보기 is not that common word.
보고 싶으면 o
보기 싶으면 x
This is why I say Facebook used translator.
To be honest that question sounds more intriguing than numerical analysis though @Balarka
13:25
maybe
보고 싶으면 o
보기 싶으면 x
쏘ㅑㄴ ㅑㄴ 갸홋.
보고 싶으면 o
보기 싶으면 x
This is right.
ok
It's a good exercise in undertanding Siefert surfaces, yes, @Alessandro
보기 has implication your thought.
13:27
@kayak 하씨 한국말 할 수 있어요?
당연하지!!
난 한국인이니까ㅋㅋㅋ
이거 읽을 수 있어?
@kayak 예
ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ 여기에 얼마나 많은 한국인이 왔었을까?
@kayak 어디?
이 채팅방
this chat room
13:30
너만 생각해
@kayak 난 읽을 수 있어
너만 생각해 : ??
@Balarka what is
여기의 하국인 너만 있는 게 생각해
I asked him what the Siefert surfaces of the Hopf link and the trefoil are, @MikeMiller.
Nothing special.
13:32
여기의 하국인 너만 있는 게 생각해 : I think you r the only person who is korean here?
@kayak yes, can you teach me how to say that properly?
물론!
But how?
well, how would you say that sentence?
What sentence?
여기의 하국인 너만 있는 게 생각해 this one?
13:34
Should I say ... Yeogiui hankukin... like this?
No
I think my sentence was clumsy
Yeogiui hangukin nauman itnungea seang gak hea
I mean
Ahl..
여기에 너만 한국인이라고 나는 생각해.
thanks
@kayak "여기" "이리" 같아?
13:37
not same...
어떻게?
not many words are same haha...
For being a good teacher.
Do I have to say 'it's same'..?
Ok I just tell them.
??
여기 = here. 이리 is not a word.
이리 와= come here.
와=come 이리 to here.
이리 = 이쪽으로=to this direction.
일았어
13:39
이리 와 : not respectful. its an order.
이쪽으로 와 is better.
이쪽으로 오세요 : respectful.
이쪽으로 오십시오 lol
Yes.
good student.
thanks xd
@kayak "한국말" vs "한국어", which one do you use?
한국어 재미있어
Good question.
한국말 is used by forign people.
한국어 is correct
lol
13:42
I guess 한국말 is wrong.
There are words that is not correct but commonly used.
I guess( Im not a languagest) 한국말 is wrong.
linguist
Thanks haha
http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/2052269/has-a-unique-solution-for-the-elliptic-equation-over-special-case-mu-lambda
Is my question is that difficult? No one is interested in my quesiton TT
@kayak how do you say "could you XXX"?
I've learnt 'Could you'='Would you'='Should you' = 해줄수 있어?
oh, thanks
13:48
Could you check this?=점검해줄 수 있어?
Could you do homework? = 숙제 해줄 수 있어?
@kayak is it polite to use "너"?
Not polite.
and "나"?
@kayak
나 is me
is it polite?
13:54
Is 'I' polite?
Idk haha
is '나' polite
well, would it be appropriate to say '너' here?
ah!! '나'is not polite
저 is more polite that 나
It means 'I' samely
but can I use '나' here?
Yes you can
not that unpolite.
can I use '너' here?
13:56
No you can't
It's aggressive.
I see
hahahahaha lol
so how would I refer to you?
kayak님
하님?
13:57
Or 하님 Ok
하씨 seems too polite
헌진 님
Not too polite. not more polite than 하님
I see
대학생이야?
grad student
Not that old
haha
무슨 대학?
13:59
Postech.
You can google it.
Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH) is a private research university in Pohang, South Korea dedicated to research and education in science and technology. In 2012-2014, the Times Higher Education ranked POSTECH 1st in its "100 Under 50 Young Universities" rankings. == Introduction == === History === POSTECH was established in 1986 in Pohang, Korea by POSCO, one of the world's leading steel companies, for the purpose of providing advanced education for budding engineers and laying the groundwork for future technological development. The founder of POSCO and the founding chairman...
포항공과대학교
www.fb.com/hihunjin
If you want you can add me.
싫어 xd
Ok
haha
I have many foreign friends who want to learn Korean.
I want to because there is this webtoon that noone is translating ;w;
14:02
@mercio You want to add me?
I don't use facebook
lol
I plan to learn Russian at some point. Whimsical thoughts are harder to turn into reality than cooking it up though.
@kayak 한국 어떻게 생각해?
Sorry but I have to sleep TT
You mean about president?
I considered learning Russian too @Balarka, according to my sister who's studying to become an interpreter it's pretty damn hard though
14:07
anything
I like my country
really safe country isn't it.
I love Korea
@Alessandro Ya, so I heard.
Bye @DHMO
bye
hellow....
0/
14:25
@KajHansen I know.
14:42
Icelandic seems unnecessarily hard
good morning / afternoon / evening
Hi @meow
Are you learning icelandic? @Mike
IIRC Icelanding is by origin Germanic. But I don't know anything much about it.
nordic
@Alessandro nope
ah, ok.
14:56
i'm so confused on this
What's this?
some of @TedShifrin's projective geometry book
only one specific part
are you trying to use inner products again
??
no it has to do with him representing projective $2$-space with the plane
Can you elaborate?
15:05
so umm one second
let me get a snap of this
why is $x_0 = 0$ represented as a diagonal downwards line?
(this is $\Bbb P^2$, with homogeneous coordinates $[x_0,x_1,x_2]$)
well because $x_0=0$ is the equation of a line so it should be a line
those are the "lines at infinity"
Can't you choose any line as the one with $x_0=0$?
The whole picture is not quite clear to me, but it intersects $x_1 = 0$ and $x_2 = 0$ because that's what happens in P^2: any two lines intersect at a point
Since there's a projective transformation sending the line at infinity into your chosen line
15:11
Welp, I hope this is the laziest question I see today: math.stackexchange.com/q/2052566/137524
lol
Let's say the handwriting is better than average? @semi
Give that man a cookie for the handwriting.
@Semiclassical this question is lazier, isn't it?
Doesn't count.
15:22
@mercio obviously....
but this isn't $\Bbb R^2$
@meow-mix Of course not. He's just drawing a schematic.
Lines are represented by literal lines in R^2 in a way consistent with the geometry.
sigh today is a bad day :(
why?
because ISIS is threatening to capture Palmyra
15:30
@Semiclassical lazy as in hand-writing the whole question?
You do have a strange definition of lazy
Lazy as in putting no effort in making this question fit as per the guidelines in MSE.
He already had the problem handwritten. He just snapshotted it up and didn't even show his efforts on the problems.
That's pretty lazy to me.
And image posts are discouraged since the link might die in the future, which is why questions are supposed to be self contained
@DHMO hi!
I want some proofs
Any proof ?
we all do
15:41
Does anyone know what motivated the use of Tchebychev polynomials ?
255
Q: Proofs without words

Mariano Suárez-ÁlvarezCan you give examples of proofs without words? In particular, can you give examples of proofs without words for non-trivial results? (One could ask if this is of interest to mathematicians, and I would say yes, in so far as the kind of little gems that usually fall under the title of 'proofs wit...

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What does an intersection sign between spaces of functions mean? I keep seeing this lately but I don't know what it means! For example, let $\Omega$ be a bounded domain in $\mathhbb{R}^2$. What does $u \in C^1(\Omega) \bigcap C(\overline{\Omega})$ mean?
can anyone check if my post is sound? math.stackexchange.com/questions/2052560/…
In (ii) I got how to show,but iam not getting how to do (i)
15:44
@Ramanujan If that sequence converges, then $y = \sqrt[n]{f(x) + y}$
$y = (f(x)+y)^{1/n}$
The roots of the Chebyshev polynomials of the first kind are the so called Chebyshev nodes which are used in numerical analysis (polynomial interpolation more precisely), but I don't know anything about Chebishev polynomials apart from that @Astyx
@Ramanujan $\dfrac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dx} = \dfrac{(f(x)+y)^{(1/n)-1}}{n} \cdot \left( f'(x) + \dfrac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dx} \right)$
@Alessandro Yes, I was wondering what motivated the study of Tchebychev polynomials in polynomial interpolation and approximation
@meow I agree with koch on his comment
The point of the Chebishev nodes is that they don't have some convergence issues when used for interpolation that other nodes (i.e. equally spaced ones) have
@Astyx that's not my proof
15:46
@Ramanujan Also, from $y=\sqrt[n]{f(x)+y}$, we have $y^n = f(x)+y$
@Astyx mine is the one below lol
I can elaborate on that when I return home since I'm on mobile now if you're interested @astyx
@Ramanujan So $\dfrac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dx} = \dfrac{(y^n)^{(1/n)-1}}{n} \cdot \left( f'(x) + \dfrac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dx} \right)$
$\dfrac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dx} = \dfrac{y\cdot y^{-n}}{n} \cdot \left( f'(x) + \dfrac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dx} \right)$
$\dfrac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dx} = \dfrac{y}{ny^n} \cdot \left( f'(x) + \dfrac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dx} \right)$
$\dfrac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dx} = \dfrac{1}{ny^{n-1}} \cdot \left( f'(x) + \dfrac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dx} \right)$
$\dfrac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dx} = \dfrac{f'(x)}{ny^{n-1}} + \dfrac{1}{ny^{n-1}} \cdot \dfrac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dx}$
@Alessandro Yes they limit the runge effect, but historrically why did Tchebychev study these particullarily ? Is it because of their norm is minimal ? How did Tchebychev (or was it even him ?) "know" the roots of these polynomials would give the "best" approximation when interpolating ?
@Ramanujan $\dfrac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dx}\left( 1 - \dfrac{1}{ny^{n-1}} \right) = \dfrac{f'(x)}{ny^{n-1}}$
$\dfrac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dx}\left( ny^{n-1} - 1 \right) = f'(x)$
15:49
@Alessandro My question is more about their appearance than what their use is (I know the proofs of why they do approximate well, but I want to know what motivated their study in the first place)
I have no idea about that, they don't teach us much history
@Ramanujan $\dfrac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dx} = \dfrac{f'(x)}{ny^{n-1} - 1}$
And we're done
Yes it's a pity really
@DHMO yeah,thanks mathemagician
you are welcome
15:53
Some more questions are there to discuss
Why?
Does it make sense to say that $\overline {\Bbb Z} = \Bbb Z$ ? Or does convention have it $\overline {\Bbb Z} = \Bbb Z \cup \{-\infty, +\infty\}$ ?
@DHMO why is it like that?
@Ramanujan I do not understand what you wrote
@Astyx no sequence in $\Bbb Z$ converges to $-\infty$ or $\infty$
$\sin(a,b)\cos(a×b,c)=1
Then, sin(a,b)=1 and cos(a×b,c)=1
What does sin(a,b) mean?
15:58
I was taught that $\overline {\Bbb R} = \Bbb R\cup\{-\infty, +\infty\}$ (the extended real line) Is that specific to $\Bbb R$ ?
a , b and c are vectors
What does sin(a,b) mean?
(a,b) means angle between vectors a and b @DHMO
what do you guys think of this tikz figure i made for induction?
@Astyx oh, I thought $\overline {\Bbb Z}$ means the closure of $\Bbb Z$ lol
@meow-mix you should start at S(0)

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