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23:00
@dalbouvet No, $g$ is not defined at $0$. To have a removable discontinuity at $x=a$, the function must have a value at $x=a$. At least, that's the way most mathematicians use the language.
hi Lucas
@TedShifrin ah yes, you're right
I always have to remind calculus students that the function $f(x)=1/x$ is continuous, despite what their high school teachers may have said.
Hi Ted 1
@TedShifrin Ted! :D
hi @Kasmir
yeey :)
I was waiting when you gonna show up
anyway I got a Q!
23:07
I'm leaving soon, though.
damn it :D
hi @KasmirKhaan
@LeakyNun Hello leaky :D
Ok my Q is
we have a surjevtive ring hom from A to B
so, not just a ring epimorphism :P
the map I ---> f^-1 (I) is a bijection
damn it leaky we are over that now -.-
23:09
between what sets
hush, Leaky
that is the problem
I think the proof of the teacher am following is wrong
what does the letter $I$ signify?
since that map is not from A---> B
I is an ideal
The teacher is right. YOu're not understanding.
23:10
I ideal in A, and f^-1( I) are the same thing
No, $I$ is an ideal in $B$.
in that case it is clear
This is a bijection from the set of ideals in $B$ to the set of ideals in $A$ containing $\ker f$.
elements of A mapping to elements of B
Kasmir, you're saying garbage.
23:10
why is that
and too mean ????
Well, you keep talking instead of reading what I've said. So, yes, mean.
I understand ur point TED
I did that before coming here
BUT , in writing it this way
But you started out by writing $I$ an ideal in $A$ ... in which case $f^{-1}(I)$ makes zero sense.
the map f : A---> B , I mapped to the preimage f^-1 ( I)
exactly !!
that what I come here to ask , that does make no sense
Reread everything I've typed.
And understand it.
23:13
I get it Ted i promise
You clearly do NOT get it. Come on.
ideals in A that contain the kernel
are in bijection with ideals of B
this is no surprise
Well, then why are you typing all this nonsense?
since ideals maps to ideal
We're doing inverse image, not forward image.
23:14
am not, in proving this, the teacher messed up the roll of I being in A istead of being in B
No, I is an ideal in B, dammit.
that what i said Ted
If the teacher wrote $f^{-1}(I)$, the teacher knew that $I\subset B$.
the way he wrote it , it is in A , and that clearly make no sense AT ALL
Maybe you messed up in your notes.
Where did the teacher say $I\subset A$?
23:16
nah nah, was online, but if you write it this way, the map f : A---> B , I --> f^-1( I)
show us
it make no sense ofc, since that map does not map A to B
You're not understanding ... The teacher is right.
so we are allowed to use f going from A to B
and then take elements in B mapping tthem to A ?
Precisely. That's what inverse image means.
23:17
preimage lives in A
I lives in B
you're mapping sets to sets, not elements to elements.
why the rolls are reversed ?
You'll see that everywhere when you take topology, too. You talk about continuity in terms of preimages of sets.
Because preimages often behave way better than images.
The image of an ideal under a ring homomorphism is not necessarily an ideal. The preimage of an ideal always is.
i think you meant subgroup in the first one
but that is not my comfusion here ._.' the thing is , if one wrrite f :A--> B
I meant what I said.
23:20
one would like to take elements in A mapping to elements in B
that what A---> B is
otherwise the map is not doing what it should
And preimage maps subsets of $B$ to subsets of $A$.
show us your online notes.
5 mins ago, by Kasmir Khaan
nah nah, was online, but if you write it this way, the map f : A---> B , I --> f^-1( I)
show us this line
it is exactly liuke that leaky and it s a university course
cant share it
I bet money it is not like that. There are some words.
Even when you first wrote it, you had words.
If $f\colon A\to B$ is a surjective ring homomorphism, then we get a bijection $I\rightsquigarrow f^{-1}(I)$ between ....
i would like if we had this , f^-1 : B---> A , I ---> f^-1 ( I)
23:23
Take a screenshot. Don't miss the money.
That's garbage.
$f^{-1}$ is NOT a mapping.
Unless $f$ is an isomorphism to start with.
at least as sets
You continue NOT to listen to what I've said multiple times.
23:23
TED ! I DO I SWEAR
MY COMFUSION IS NTO WHERE U THINK IT IS
No, you have to talk about $f^{-1}:\mathscr P(B)\to\mathscr P(A)$.
OUPS CAPS
am not using this as fns
lmao!
as map of sets
f^-1 is just a premiage
That does not give a mapping from set $B$ to set $A$.
23:24
why is that?
I just told you it maps SUBSETS of $B$ to SUBSETS of $A$.
A function has to associate to each element of its domain a single element of the range.
This is basic, basic, basic stuff.
am not using that as a function
just wanted to know , the sourse and the target do agree
in that way
we take elements that lives in A to B
howver typing it this way, f : A--->B , then taking I in B mapping to it its preimage in A
seems not something that should be written that way, A---> B
then type verbatim what is said online
B--->A would be more appropriate
LEAKY ! THAT IS EXACTLY WHAT IS SAID GRRRRRRRRRR
I give up, Kasmir. Seriously. You keep repeating the same stuff, totally not understanding what I've tried to say multiple times.
23:28
Ted !
No, I mean it.
ask me anything about this
and ill answer to show i understood
ask me what u think i dont get
you don't get the fact that there is no way you quoted verbatim what the online course notes say
Quote the exact statement, in their own words?
am not saying that the notes are wrong just that particular detail
like Ted said
ideals in B are in 1:1 corres with ideals in A that contain ker
but that is not what I dont get
23:31
do you know what the word "verbatim" means
or the phrase "in their own words"
if yes, then do that and resolve this conversation
i litterly wrote what is in there 5 times now
that is the statement leaky
anyway ._. sorry about this'
Ill continue doing my stuff ._.'
quote the whole statement
explain to me this map
f : I ---> f' (I)
f' is the preimage
if you know that f : A-->B
A,B are rings
the full citation is this,
let f : A--> B be a surjective ring hom
the map f : I---> f'(I) is a bijection
23:37
Back again
So I have a pretty simple question.
are you sure they used --> not |-->
How do I (formally) prove that $\forall n \in \Bbb Z_+$ the set $\{r\in \Bbb Z_{\geq 0}: n \geq 2^r\}$ is finite?
@Lucas: Can you show $\{2^r\}$ is unbounded above?
Informally: If it was infinite, then $n$ would also be infinite
@TedShifrin Yeah that's simple
Then $\{r: 2^r\le n\}$ has a least upper bound.
23:41
Why?
Because you just admitted it was bounded above.
$\Bbb N := \Bbb Z_{\ge 0}$
2
Not to me, @Leaky.
I was confused by the latter for so long
I was like, what? integers?
@LeakyNun Yeah.
23:42
We've fought over that before in here. In Europe, $\Bbb N$ apparently includes $0$. In the US, it doesn't.
not talking about that
@TedShifrin where exactly?
When you admitted $\{2^r\}$ is unbounded above :)
OHHH, and $n$ would be an upper bound.
No, we have to be careful about domain and range here.
23:44
it's a subset of a finite set {r | 0 <= r <= n}
I thought $\mathbb{Z}_{\ge 0}$ was the same as $\mathbb{N} \cup \left\{0\right\}$?
@LeakyNun ofc I |---> f'(I)
It is to me, @Nebulae. See what I just typed about US and Europe.
@TedShifrin how would you state that map ?
oh so now it's "ofc"
that's interesting
23:45
f :A-->B
I|---> f^-1 (I)
@TedShifrin I'm not really sure of how things relate.
I know its a NO
but how else would one write it in a correct way
the teacher did say I is an ideal of B
but the way it is written is wrong
you see, you told us that what you wrote is an exact quote
$f\colon A\to B$ induces a map from $\mathscr P(B)$ to $\mathscr P(A)$.
23:46
and then later you quoted a longer thing
9 mins ago, by Kasmir Khaan
the full citation is this,
9 mins ago, by Kasmir Khaan
let f : A--> B be a surjective ring hom
9 mins ago, by Kasmir Khaan
the map f : I---> f'(I) is a bijection
which I'm sure is still wrong, but at least it's more correct than your first "exact quote"
that make no sense , i was typing it very fast
f should not be in second statement
there you go
@TedShifrin Oh, I see. I thought leaky was implying it means something else entirely. Probably didn't see the $\ge 0$.
@TedShifrin so that happened
@Ted is a famous guy
23:48
That part is not the problem ! and Ted! @TedShifrin if one wrote this
f : A--> B
f' ( I) |---> I
and I is ideal of B
wont this make more sense then the reverse?
f' (I) is in A, I is in B
I think nobody will help you if you keep on not giving us the exact quote.
Yeah, right.
Kasmir, you should be a politician! xD
let f : A--> B be a surjective ring hom
I|---> f'(I) is a bijection
23:50
now that's even less words
forget i got it from a lecture how else would it be written
in these terms
You said it's online.
okay lets forget abnout it
thanks for all the help
You mean none of the help.

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