« first day (2389 days earlier)      last day (2929 days later) » 

08:05
@T_01 Definitely not. The set of squares $\{n^2 \mid n \in \mathbb{N} \}$ also has cardinality aleph_0, but the sum over their inverses is $\pi^2/6$
08:36
Would any one be so kind as to construct a function $f: \Bbb R \to [0..\infty)$ with $\displaystyle \limsup_{x\to\pm\infty} f(x) = \infty$ and $\int_\Bbb R f(x) \ \mathrm dx = 1$?
uhhh
Couldn't you like, take any function for which that integral holds
@SteamyRoot I don't know any
and replace $f(x)$ by $|x|$ if $x \in \mathbb{Z}$
In that case I would like it to be continuous...
Sounds very unlikely such function exists, then
also, I don't think I've ever seen anyone use a limes superior on functions on $\mathbb{R}$. They're usually used on sequences
08:46
I think they exist.
@SteamyRoot I guess this is to allow for the function to have oscillatory behavior at arbitrarily large times.
Also hi chat.
Hmmm...
You make a good argument
Maybe triangles will do, then
Make a central triangle with height 1 and surface under it 1/2
Then, to the left and right, put two triangles with height 2 and surface under them 1/8
@SteamyRoot beware not to have zeroes!
how do you mean, not to have zeroes
I need $\forall x \in \Bbb R: f(x) > 0$
08:49
you said $[0, \infty)$ before
oh, sorry
I meant $(0,\infty)$
Well, all we really want is a finite integral anyway
can always normalise it to 1
agreed
So just start with like, then function $1/x^2$
replace anything between $-1$ and $1$ by the constant function $1$
then it's strictly positive on all of $\mathbb{R}$ and has finite integral (which will be $4$, I believe)
and limsup?
08:53
and then add those triangles on it
@SteamyRoot I don't understand what your triangles are
are you sure they extend to infinity?
You add countably many triangles
For example, on the positive side of the function, first a triangle with height 1 and width such that it has area 1/2 under it
then add a triangle of height 2 with width such that it has area 1/4
and continue with triangles of height $n$ and area $1/2^n$
but your triangles would stop before say x=2
No, you just add the triangles at every integer
the $x$-value of every triangle is an integer
of every top angle of a triangle*
oh!
thanks!
09:03
@DHMO it's ok
@SteamyRoot are you still here?
 
1 hour later…
10:23
Nevermind that can't work
I'm quite sure such a function can't be uniformly continuous though
10:39
@DHMO have a seminar and research meetings in the afternoon
i walked a long way back home and now i feel sick
11:04
@Alessandro I don't walk from school on a regular basis
that's not the first time you do and it makes you sick if i remember correctly though
hmm, quite possibly
don't you have any physical activities at school?
i got good scores in my english exam. examiner told me that he liked my analysis of one of Blake's poems that I don't think any of our textbooks do justice
Congrats.
11:12
@skillpatrol nah
i mean, probably
which poem is it? I liked Blake in school, but I don't remember much
The Sick Rose
I have a Blake collection
I also wrote a film summary of Stalker :3
if you can do one regular physical activity every other day, I guarantee your health will improve
^ I started doing regular walks up and down the hall every few hours... feeling like a martial arts master these days
That's what I am being told. I am a lazy bum; you're right that I should do it.
11:24
Even every third day is ok.
Just do something :-)
Regularly.
I'll try something. I once started walking but then soon got bored.
"Besides, one afternoon I did step into the street; If I returned before night, I did so because of the fear that the faces of the common people inspired in me, faces as discolored and pale as the palm of one's hand."
@BalarkaSen Do you know what $p$ means in this formulation of the axiom of subsets? $\forall X \forall p \exists Y \forall u (u \in Y \equiv (u \in X \land \phi(u,p)))$
Nope!
@Alessandro would probably know
I asked him
11:42
I don't whether a parameter is a syntactical variable of the language of set theory or what exactly, you need someone who knows logic for this
Just curious, for which rational $c_i$ can the algebraic number $\sqrt{c_1+c_2\sqrt{c_3}}$ be "flattened," i.e., written such that there are no nested radicals?
It's possible for some $c_i$, such as if $c_1=d_1^2+d_2^2d_3,c_2=2d_1d_2,c_3=d_3$ for some $d_i$
Then, $\sqrt{c_1+c_2\sqrt{c_3}}=d_1+d_2\sqrt{d_3}$ (excepting negative things, etc., they can be dealt with separately)
But yeah, are these the only solutions?
12:24
Hi guys. My books says the following: Consider a disconnected graph with maximum edges. It follows that this graph has precisely two components.
Could someone explain this to me?
I know that a component is a maximum, non-empty connected subgraph
Oh wait, I think I see it
never mind
@Akiva did you find an answer for this question?
Sometimes it still boggles me that all elements of $\Bbb N$ are finite...
@DHMO How so?
It seems like a relatively simple concept that by starting with $0$ and adding $1$ repeatedly, you'll never get anything infinite
12:42
@LegionMammal978 you'll gradually forget that as you work with $\Bbb N$ and $\mathscr P(\Bbb N)$ too often
12:53
@Sha If there were more than two components, you could connect two (add an edge) and still have a disconnected graph, so it would not be with maximum edges
@Astyx bonjour
Hi @DHMO, how are you ?
ca va
Quoi de neuf ?
@Astyx tu peux lire "axiom of subset" ici est la propiete a deux parametres... mais si tu cliques le lien "axiom of subset", la formulation est differente...
12:59
C'est la même chose dans le fond
C'est juste qu'ils introduisent les variables dans le texte et pas dans la ligne de quantificateurs
@Astyx je ne comprends pas la propiete avec deux variables
Qu'est-ce qui te dérange ?
pourquoi y a-t-il deux variables
Je pense que c'est juste pour montrer que la propriété peut dépendre d'autre chose que u
Par exemple tu peux définir $\phi(u, p) \iff u=p$
pourquoi c'est necessaire?
13:07
Je pense que c'est juste une histoire de notation
Ça n'a pas beaucoup d'importance
Les notations varient sûrement d'un texte à un autre
(d'où l'utilité de les préciser)
@Astyx cela peut-etre peut te donner quelques idees
Oui c'est ce que je voulais dire
@Astyx mais qu'est-ce qu'il voulait dire?
Qui ?
le deuxieme variable
13:16
Disons que ça permet de prendre en compte tout ce qui n'existe pas
Tout ce qui ne peut pas être défini
@Astyx quoi.... je n'en comprends rien
La réponse de Noah Schweber ne te convient pas ?
non...
Pourquoi ?
cela me pareil tout arbitraire
13:22
Ça l'est un petit peu
Tout l'est à ce niveau
Enfin façon de parler
@Astyx Yea, I was a bit confused by the definition of connectednes, but I get it now!
@Astyx quoi...
The way I see it is a component is the knots you get when you pull one
@DHMO Je ne vois pas vraiment comment l'expliquer
Mais la réponse de Noah me parait clair pourtant
@Astyx quel est un parameter?
Salut @Ted
@DHMO j'ai du mal à comprendre ta question
13:29
@Astyx nous disons de "parametres"
qu'est-ce qu'ils sont pour commencer?
"Paramètre" c'est le nom donné à l'argument d'une fonction
Si je ne dis pas de bétises
peux-tu me donner un exemple?
$f(x) = x^2$, le paramètre c'est $x$
@Astyx un exemple de $\varphi(u,p)$?
Euh
$\phi(u, p) = True$
13:34
s'il te plait
un exemple de $\varphi(u,p)$ qui contient $u$ et $p$
J'essaie de trouver
Enfin $\phi(u,p) \iff u=p$ par exemple
$\forall X \forall p \exists Y \forall u (u \in Y \equiv (u \in X \land \phi(u,p)))$...
d'accord merci
Euh ça dépend ce que tu entends par ça
@Astyx comment utiliser l'axiome?
Il dit juste que tu peux définir $\{x\in X, \phi(x, p)\}$
Donc en soit ce que tu disais était vrai
On peut l'utiliser pour définir l'ensemble des entiers impairs (mais on peut aussi les définir autrement, ou au moins définir un ensemble isomorphe)
13:40
alors, $\{n \in \Bbb N, \text{n est un nombre impair}\}$
Par exemple tu peux aussi définir $\{x\in \Bbb R, x\gt a\}$ pour $a\in \Bbb R$
ah, merci!
Sans avoir à te poser de questions existentielles comme "Est-ce que cet ensemble existe vraiment ?"
Enfin c'est ce que je comprends en tous cas
A preuver que $A \in A$ n'est pas possible:
Soit $A$ un ensemble tel que $A \in A$.
Considere l'ensemble $\{A\}$ (axiome de la paire, axiome d'extensionnalite).
Nous avons que $x \in A \equiv x = A$.
Alors, $x \cap A = A \ne \varnothing$, qui contredit l'axiome de fondation:
$\forall S[S \ne \varnothing \implies (\exists x[x \in S \land x \cap S = \varnothing])]$
@Astyx cela c'est correct?
Oui ça m'a l'ait bon
13:48
@Astyx as-tu exercises pour moi?
exercises simples :p
Je ne suis pas un expert en théorie des ensembles, surtout à un niveau aussi bas
Est-ce que tu connais la preuve que pour $X$ un ensemble, l'ensemble des parties de $X$ a un cardinal supérieur à celui de $X$ ?
Argument de la diagonale de Cantor
C'est à dire ?
je voyais la preuve avant, mais je l'ai oublie
je vais essaier de le preuver
prouver :)
13:53
merci
Enfin qu'est-ce que tu entends par l'argument de la diagonale de Cantor ?
laisse-moi l'essaier
Très bien
Soit $f: X \to \mathscr P(X)$ une fonction surjective.
Nous savons que $\forall a \in X: f(a) \subseteq X$.
Soit $B = \{a \notin f(a)|a \in X\}$.
Nous savons que $B \subseteq X$.
Soit $f(b) = B$.
Si $b \in B$, donc $b \notin B$...
Si $b \notin B$, donc $b \in B$...
@Astyx ^
Tu t'es trompé dans la définition de $B$
C'est dans l'autre sens
Sinon c'est ça
14:01
@Astyx qu'est-ce que tu veux dire?
Juste pour la langue, c'est pas correct de dire "Si ... donc ..." on doit dire : "Si ... alors ..."
merci!
$B = \{x\in X | x\notin f(x)\}$
oh, merci
What's the better way to know $lim_{x\to 0^{+}}{x\ln(x)}=0$, without drawing the graph?
14:03
Parce que tu ne peux pas vraiment définir l'ensemble des $x$ tels que $x\notin f(x)$ (même si on comprend ce que tu veux dire)
@N1ng $\displaystyle \lim_{x \to 0^+} x \ln x = \lim_{y \to -\infty} y e^y$
@Astyx merci, je le comprends
Pas de quoi :)
Hi all
14:21
@Astyx peux-tu prouver que surjection et injection font bijection?
@Astyx je viens de decouvrir qu'il depend sur l'axiome de choix :o
Hey
I am reading my script and I am stuck at one point: Why should someone get the count of multi-combinitions from combinitions?

Proposition. $\{m \in \mathbb N_{0}^{n}|\sum_{j\in[1,n]}m_j = k \} \rightarrow Comb_{n-1}([1,k+n-1]), m \mapsto [\sum_{j\in [1,l]}m_j+l]_{l\in[1,n-1]}$
14:44
Hello
hi
How are you
Hi
i'm fine
@Ramanujan fine
14:45
@Fawad, please help me with this question
Prove that n is even..

[(cosA+cosB)/(sinA-sinB)]^n + [(sinA+sinB)/(cosA-cosB)]^n=2cot^n (A-B)/2.
Actually, here n is even and we have to prove that identity
OK,till where are you up to?
I thought to use Induction.. But how?
Yes,indication is correct approach
Prove for n=1 is true
@Fawad, n is even
(let's leave what n is ,even or odd)
For n=1 is true?
14:49
Wait, I am trying with n=1
@Fawad, not true..
Yes :P let me try
OK,for n=2
Iam trying
[Crazy idea] Path dependent geometries:

Introduction:
Consider the orbit $Gx$ where $G=(\{0,\pm 1\},+)$ and $x\in (\mathbb{Z},+)$. This is path independent because given any fixed $x,y\in (\mathbb{Z},+)$ and a word $w$ formed by a sequence of elements in $G$, $w \in (\mathbb{Z},+)$

Alternative explanation in terms of vectors. The above description is equivalent to a 1 dimensional vector space where the allowed vectors are of integer length and the allowed elements of addition are the unit vector, its additive inverse and the zero vector. The path independence is then straightforward as an
@Fawad, for n=2, the identity is true..
You did all long…?!?
@Fawad why"
15:01
I have no idea
@Fawad, but for n=2, the given identity is true. Now, how to proceed further..?
Now, consider a finite subset of size n of the previous structure and impose extra conditions as follows:
Given any starting point x and a word w. To compute wx, do the following:
0. Evaluate the operations from the leftmost to the rightmost
1. For every +1 in w, increase the size of the set by 1 in both directions
2. For every -1 in w, decrease the size of the set by 1 in both directions

Now consider some starting point x and some word w. w forms a path that link x to wx. Notes what happens:
OK,I got how to do , I will upload photo
Ok @Fawad, fast
I am waiting
@Secret you're playing with words now aren't you
15:07
in semigroup theory, word has a special meaning. It means any expression formed by elements of semigroups. Basically, it is an ordered sequence of operations
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word_(group_theory)
The term is more frequently used in groups however
@Ramanujan then take case for n=even and n=odd,for n=even (-1)^n =1 so answer becomes 0 and for n=odd (-1)^n becomes 1 so it becomes 2Cot(A-…
@Secret what is an orbit then
@Fawad, why did you simplify the expression
@DHMO An orbit is all transformation made by a group on some set X, i.e. the set $Gx=\{gx|g \in G, x \in X\}$. This terminology is used in the context of group actions. For semigroups, you have an analogous concept called semigroup actions and these are done by transformation semigroups
@Ramanujan to get RHS,so you think we can so by mathematical induction?It seems impossible
I think it's the only way…
15:12
@Secret coset?
@Fawad, without simplification, if we take n=2, then LHS=RHS
27 mins ago, by Ramanujan
Prove that n is even..

[(cosA+cosB)/(sinA-sinB)]^n + [(sinA+sinB)/(cosA-cosB)]^n=2cot^n (A-B)/2.
@DHMO In the special case where X=G, then yes it will become a left or right coset
@Secret I see
Group action is more general in that it is a transformation by a group on some set. for example the group of reflections on the points in a triangle
15:14
OK,@Ramanujan so we prooved for n=even LHS=RHS right?
@Fawad, how do I upload a figure using Mobile?! If possible I will show you what I have tried
(Now to continue)
O sorry, one more rule:
3. If an element in w will result in x to be no longer in the structure, then set that element to 0

Now:
Enable desktop mode @Ramanujan
@Fawad, how to proceed after LHS=RHS
Actually screw it, I made some mistakes in the rules somewhere...
15:23
If you started with LHS and Got RHS then you have showed what question was asking to show… @Ramanujan
good morning @Ted
Hi @Alessandro. I didn't realize I hadn't logged out last night.
Hi
Hi @Semi
sometimes I open the chat and it shows me on the right with the recently active users, sometimes it doesn't, I don't really understand how that works
15:26
Hi.
I'll be back later ...
Here is a doubt with induction:
Nevermind.
@Topologicalife, @Fawad, please see that
15:38
Guys is there any difference between Sylow subgroup and Sylow - p -ssubgroup ?
16:04
hello guys
can you explain to me what does this definition means?
0
Q: Geometric meaning of dimension of $X \subset \mathbb{R}^n$

user8469759In a book I've been reading (focused on combinatorial optimization), the following definition is given The dimension $\text{dim} \; X$ of a non empty subset $X \in \mathbb{R}^2$ is defined to be $$ n - \max \left\{rank(A) : A \in \mathbb{R}^{n \times n}, Ax = Ay \; \forall x,y \in X\right\}...

What is the symbol you use when you don't know the relation between two sides of an expression?
$\Delta$?
14
Q: Symbol for unknown relation?

Frank VelWhen solving equations like $$\begin{align} 4x-4 &=\frac{(2x)^2}{x} \\ -4 &= \frac{4x^2}{x} -4x \\ -4 &= 4x -4x \\[0.2em] -4 &= 0\end{align}$$ using the equality-symbol feels like abuse of notation, since you'll end up with $-4=0$, which is not an equality. For instance I feel it would be bette...

[Random] Prove that $\oint f(x)dx=0$ for a vector field $f$ (1) implies path independence on $f$ (2).
Prove:
(1)=>(2)
Suppose $\oint f(x)dx=0$. Then $\int_{C}f(x)dx-\int_{D}f(x)dx$, $\int_C f(x)dx=\int_{D}f(x)dx$
(2)=>(1) reverse the above proof.
16:24
[Random]
Consider $S_{2n+1}=\{-n,...,0,...,n\}\subset (\mathbb{Z},+)$ with the following additional rule:
1. If the operation is an integer $k < 0$, reduce the size of $S_{2n+1}$ by $k$ in both the negative and positive ends starting from the largest and smallest element
2. If the operation k will result in the element k+x to fall outside of the current $S_m$, then k+x=x
Thank you @Secret
16:43
Now the following can be demonstrated:
Noncommutativity of components of k:
Consider $S_{2n+1}$, $x=2n$, $kx=2-1+x=2+(2n-1)=2n+1,S_{2n}$, but $k'x=-1+2+x=-1+2n+1=2n,S_{2n}\neq kx,S_{2n}$

Nonassociativity
Consider $S_{2n+1}$, $x=0$, $kx=-1+1+(-1+x)=2n,S_{2n-1}$ but $kx=(-1+1)-1+x=0-1+x=2n,S_{2n}$ and $kx=-1+(-1+1)+x=-1+0+x=2n,S_{2n}$
Ok this is not screwed up enough. The ideal case is a semigroup such that given any word of any length and constitutent, they are all unique elements in that it is not power associative, alternative, lie or any other notion of asosciativity
->I am trying to use thise to build some kind of path dependent geometry, where every single path including the start and endpoints matter in the navigation within such space
$\left[\lim_{n\to\infty}\left(1-\dfrac1n\right)^{-n}\right]^{-1}=\dfrac 1e$
How??
@Fawad Let $u=-n$, $\displaystyle \lim_{n\to\infty} \left(1-\frac1n\right)^{-n} = \lim_{u\to\infty} \left(1+\frac1u\right)^u = e$
17:00
@DHMO if u=-n then as $n\to \infty$ then $u\to-\infty$ or not?
yes
You didn't wrote…typo?
@AlessandroCodenotti Yeah, I'm pretty sure it's false
@Fawad yes
@AkivaWeinberger Is this supposed to be $C \subseteq \Bbb R^n$?
@AkivaWeinberger that'd be my guess too
it feels like it shouldn't be hard to construct an explicit counterexample
17:05
@AkivaWeinberger Could you restate the question? The typos are blocking my understanding
actually, I asked that before, if $C=[0,1]$ in $\Bbb R$, isn't $F=(-\infty,0]\cup[1,+\infty)$?
@DHMO I never saw limit of "e" when terms in that expression goes to negative infinity
Doesn't $C \subseteq F$ always hold?
@SteamyRoot oh... right
@DHMO Yeah, sorry
17:07
@DHMO sorry for bad English, understand my doubt?
@AlessandroCodenotti No, $F$ would be $\Bbb R$.
so if $C=[0,1]$ in $\Bbb R$ we have $F=\Bbb R$
Which is open.
$\displaystyle \lim_{n\to\infty} \left(1-\frac1n\right)^{-n}$
$= \displaystyle \lim_{n\to\infty} \left(\frac{n-1}n\right)^{-n}$
$= \displaystyle \lim_{n\to\infty} \left(\frac n{n-1}\right)^n$
$= \displaystyle \lim_{n\to\infty} \left(\frac {n+1}n\right)^n$
$= \displaystyle \lim_{n\to\infty} \left(1+\frac1n\right)^n$
$= \displaystyle e$
yeah, I don't know why I worried about the boundary and forgot about the interior points
that was a brain fart
17:08
@AkivaWeinberger Could you please restate your question?
@DHMO $C\subseteq\Bbb R^n$ is closed. $F$ is the set of points $f$ such that there is a unique element of $C$ closest to $f$; in other words, if $c_1,c_2\in C$, and $d(f,C)=d(f,c_1)=d(f,c_2)$, then $c_1=c_2$.
The claim, which I'm now sure is false in general, is that $F$ is open.
$d(f,C)$, to remind, is $\inf_{c\in C}d(f,c)$.
@DHMO how $\dfrac{n}{n-1} = \dfrac{n+1}{n}$ ?
Since $C$ is closed, I can replace that $\inf$ with $\min$.
@Fawad Replace $n$ by $n+1$
@DHMO I'd advise using a different letter when you substitute
Also, you may want to also change your exponent if you do that
@SteamyRoot right, I'm stupid
(of course, the exponent doesn't matter here, but still :) )
@DHMO sorry I went away
Stuff like $n\mapsto n+1$ as a replacement rule is something I like, but it tends to be confusing for others.
$\displaystyle \lim_{n\to\infty} \left(1-\frac1n\right)^{-n}$
$= \displaystyle \lim_{n\to\infty} \left(\frac{n-1}n\right)^{-n}$
$= \displaystyle \lim_{n\to\infty} \left(\frac n{n-1}\right)^n$
$= \displaystyle \lim_{k=(n-1)\to\infty} \left(\frac {k+1}k\right)^{k+1}$
$= \displaystyle \lim_{k\to\infty} \left(1+\frac1k\right)^k \left(1+\frac1k\right)$
$= \displaystyle e$
17:12
Surjection + injection = bijection par définition
@Astyx cela depend sur l'axiome de choix, j'ai decouvert!
Ah non je vois ce que tu veux dire
Tu veux dire que s'il existe une injection et s'il existe une injection, alors il existe une bijection ?
Alternatively, one has $e^x=\lim_{n\to \infty} \left(1+\frac{x}{n}\right)^n$.
Dans ce cas oui, ça semble assez probable que ça dépende de l'axiome du choix
@Semiclassical Yeah, I like doing it that way because I get to keep the variable name. -- I've seen people write it like "Define $n'=n-1$" and then, after the last step, say something like, "Dropping the primes, we get…" to get back the original variable name.
17:14
Pour les ensembles infinis
@Astyx ce theoreme a un nom
It's especially tedious when you're doing something like $x\mapsto -x$ on a symmetric interval.
Oui, mais je ne m'en rappelle plus
One also has $$e = \lim_{n \to \infty}\left(1+\frac{1}{n}\right)^{n+m}$$ for any $m \in \mathbb{R}$
17:15
@Astyx c'est ici
Oui c'est ça
Je me rappelais qu'il y avait trois noms, mais je ne savais plus qui
@AkivaWeinberger Let us transform (riskily) to "$G$ is the set of points $g$ such that there are more than one element in $C$ closest to $g$, then $G$ is closed."
In other words, you're considering the complement?
Yes
I imagine that one more generally has: If $f(n)\sim g(n)\to\infty$ as $n\to\infty$, then $(1+1/g(n))^{f(n)}\to e$ as $n\to\infty$.
17:16
Sure. (Though, to avoid confusion, maybe call it a new letter? Like $G$?)
In any case, my proposed counterexample is the parabola.
@AkivaWeinberger wow, nice!
parabola being $C$ or $F$ ?
or $G$ ? :P
@SteamyRoot $C$
See?
2
I mean, $C$.
Hmmm... so $G$ would be the axis of symmetry minus the intersection with the parabola, or am I missing some points?
17:19
@SteamyRoot $G$ is completely inside the parabola
@SteamyRoot I think $G$ would be the interval $(\frac12,\infty)$ on the $y$-axis.
$G$ is the axis of symmetry inside the parabola
Oh, right
But not the point $\langle0,\frac12\rangle$ itself, only the things above it.
(I'm talking about the standard parabola $y=x^2$.)
In that case, @AkivaWeinberger what about an ellipse?
17:20
Probably the same deal, though I'm not sure exactly where the endpoints would be.
@AkivaWeinberger challenge: can we make $G$ neither open nor closed?
@DHMO Doesn't the same example work
A ray isn't open in $\Bbb R^2$
@AkivaWeinberger nice!
Now can we make $G$ dense in $\Bbb R^n$ lol
17:51
I suspect the following question is obvious, but I'm feeling dense right now.
Suppose I'm working in R^n and I have two hypersurfaces of codimension p,q respectively.
For instance, I could have a plane and a line in 3-space. In that case, those two generically intersect in some point.
Is it obvious in the R^n case what codimension the intersection of those two hypersurfaces will generally be?
@Semiclassical p+q-n
Sounds right. (is that the dimension or the codimension, just to be sure?)
All in dimension
p and q in dimension
Okay. So if I replace that with n-p etc. then it'll be for codimension.
and you would need to n- the whole thing
17:57
Right.
so n-((n-p)+(n-q)-n) = n-(n-p-q) = p+q
Neat.
So if $p+q$ exceeds $n$, then there's no generic intersection.
yes
Mmkay.
Actually, that's sorta obvious isn't it. To be on the hypersurfaces requires p,q constraints respectively, so in general being on both of them requires all p+q constraints.
Hey guys!
18:24
heya
How's it going?
chillin, you?
Same here
Functional analysis is starting to get interesting
We've begun talking about weak convergence
Monday we're going to do Hahn-Banach, later the principle of uniform boundedness
18:44
Hello, someone knows the lusternick-schnirelmann category ?

« first day (2389 days earlier)      last day (2929 days later) »