« first day (681 days earlier)      last day (4635 days later) » 

00:00
That's actually a deep question. For certain nice classes of ODEs, there is a unique solution for any given set of initial conditions.
ODE?
ordinary differential equation.
I am guessing that is what I am working with
@Jordan Good job, you asked a "deep" question :D
Completely accidental :P
00:04
It is a start...
I am a little confused here if I want to find $\int \frac{1}{tanx}$ it is just $log(sin(x))$ but how do I get there?
I know that I can't make a u substitution becausethe derivative of tanx is sec^2 x
user19161
00:37
@Jordan You mean how you get the integral of 1/tan?
user19161
Just write 1/tan as cos/sin and know that sin'=cos.
oh of course
user19161
So you need to remember your trigonometric identities as well.
00:55
@Jordan Yes, not only do you need to remember them; but as Jasper has shown, you need to be able to manipulate them.
This is a weird question, Find an equation of the curve that passes through the point 0,1 and whose slope at (x,y) is xy
isn't that just 0 ,1?
I get it now, it is just like the old problems y(0)= 1
and y' = xy
By George, I think he's got it :D
01:11
so $\frac{1}{2} e^{x}$ is the same as $e^{\frac{x}{2}}$ right? Is there a preferred way to write that or is anything okay?
Also I do not quite understand the procedure to do this, and it is not explicitly stated in the book Solve the differential equation $y' = x + y$ by making the substitution $u = x + y$
or change or variable is the word they use
01:38
@Jordan $\frac{1}{2} e^x \ne e^{x/2}$
Try plugging in a value for $x$ and you'll get two different answers.
02:16
@MarianoSuárezAlvarez Estás? Si estas ocupado, no hay drama.
@Jordan Let $e^x=y$. You're asserting $\frac 1 2 y = \sqrt{y}$, do you realize that?
leo
leo
02:48
je je
@PeterTamaroff como va todo?
@leo Todo tranquilo. Hoy me dieron la nota de mi primer examen parcial de epistemología y tuve un $8^{50}$, asi que puedo promocionar los tres cursos!
leo
leo
@PeterTamaroff bien por ti. Me alegro
@leo Y a vos como te esta yendo?
leo
leo
por ahora bien
I have to learn spanish instead of math next semester, spanish is really hard
I just dislike spending a lot of time learning something I will never use
02:53
@leo Que estás cursando?
@Jordan What do you mean?
Why do you want to learn Spanish?
Everyone here has to take a year of language in college pretty much
leo
leo
@PeterTamaroff Análisi Real I, Grupos y anillos, ecuaciones diferenciales ordinarias
@leo Cooooooooooooool.
I am taking spanish because I know a little bit already
Como van las ODEs? Que libro usan?
@Jordan Ah! OK.
leo
leo
02:56
@PeterTamaroff este
leo
leo
dice el profe que es el que usan en el Courant Institute. El estudió ahí
y es legal!
@BenjaminLim No, he is in Madrid and so am I!
@leo Hahahah Courant? Es un lugar importante no? Legal en que sentido?
leo
leo
@PeterTamaroff hay permiso para que circule por ahí
02:58
It is bloody 5:02 AM.
@JonasTeuwen Stop complaining about the time, dude! =)
Have to get up in 3 hours man,.
@leo Ah! Muy bueno como esta formateado.
@JonasTeuwen Bah. I slept 3/4 hs today. Get some good coffee. You have that awesome machine. ;)
leo
leo
@PeterTamaroff Courant Institute
I am in Spain!
I have been sleeping 3 hours for like two weeks!
03:00
@JonasTeuwen Olè!
@JonasTeuwen What are you doing there?
leo
leo
@JonasTeuwen cool!
Conference.
leo
leo
@JonasTeuwen coool!
@JonasTeuwen Are you talking in Spanish?
No habla espagnol!
leo
leo
03:01
ja ja
ha ha
@JonasTeuwen Hahahaha! I guess then you're horrified by the spaniard's english pronounciation right?
It is quite good.
The ones at the conference at least... Many others don't speak any English.
@JonasTeuwen Oh, sure. They must be good. Either, they'll put off the audience.
Usually the people giving talks are not Spanish!
@JonasTeuwen Oh! What is the conference about?
leo
leo
03:09
the angles are dimensionless in the SI, right?
@leo Dimensionless.
Yes, since they are the quotient of two lengths.
leo
leo
@PeterTamaroff Thanks
@PeterTamaroff Harmonic analysis.
leo
leo
@PeterTamaroff and thanks!
@leo Have you discussed any operational approach to ODEs in class?
leo
leo
03:14
@PeterTamaroff What do you mean by operational?
@leo Solving ODEs in terms of operators.
leo
leo
@PeterTamaroff Differential operators, yes
@leo Right!
For example, the Cauchy-Euler equation.
It's solution is pretty operational.
leo
leo
@PeterTamaroff Yes indeed. By the way, I did not know that they are the Cauchy-Euler equation
no sabía que se llamaban así =)
@JonasTeuwen why the torus is $\Bbb R/\Bbb Z$?
Why do you ask me this questions now? I'm off to bed! Good night. See you in ... a couple of hours.
03:22
@leo La ecuacion diferencial de Cauchy Euler es de la forma $$a_n x^n y^{(n)}+a_2 \cdots+x^2 y^{(2)}+a_1 x y' +a_0=0$$ si no recuerdo mal.
leo
leo
@JonasTeuwen sleep wel!l then
@PeterTamaroff si correcto. Es un caso particular de ED de orden $n$ con coeficientes continuos
@leo Yeah. Pero me parece elegante como la tranformacion $x \mapsto z$ con $$x^n D^n = \mathcal D (\mathcal D-1)\cdots (\mathcal D-n+1) $$ la resuelve.
$$\frac{x^n}{n!} D^n = {\mathcal D \choose n}$$ :P
leo
leo
@PeterTamaroff sí. Esta es linda por eso
Asi esta mejor!
@leo Y vieron algo en general, por ejemplo, la soluction de $$(D+a)y=f(x)$$?
Me imagino que si.
leo
leo
@PeterTamaroff si
03:29
@leo Vieron algo de Heaviside?
leo
leo
@PeterTamaroff Si digamos, $Ly=f(x)$ con $L=a_n(x)D^n+\ldots a_0$
@leo Ah, los coeficients son funciones de $x$?
leo
leo
@PeterTamaroff si. Continuas
@leo Ah, espera.
Lo que dices es
escribir
$$a_0(x)+D^n y+a_1(x) D^{n-1}+\cdots a_{n-1}(x) D+a_n(x) y = F$$
como
$$F(x)=\sum_{k \leq n} a_k(x) D^{n-k} y$$
Luego poner $$ y \phi(D) = y \sum_{k\leq n} a_k D^{n-k} F$$
@leo Yo estudie de Spiegel.
leo
leo
si
@PeterTamaroff Cómo se llama el libro?
03:35
@leo Applied Differential Equations.
Pero la verdad la teoría es excelente, aunque parezca que es todo aplicado, no es asi.
leo
leo
No es cierto que ese libro lo usan para cursos de ingeniería?
@leo Si, puede ser. Pero me encató. Igualmente, no tiene las consideraciones teoricas mas ligadas al algebra como me imagino se analiza en matematica pura.
Como en el ensayo de esta pregunta mia
Bill Dubuque explica que hay conexiones con el Algebra de Lie. Me interesa bastante todo eso!
leo
leo
Es bien interesante
por cierto Argentina tiene buenos especialistas en EDs
=)
@leo Si!!! Jonas estaba contandome eso. Caffarelli es un maestro a nivel mundial.
El nombro dos mas.
Pero no me acuerdo ahora como se llaman.
leo
leo
bueno también está un Rodrigues, de la fórmula de Rodrigues para los polinomios de Legendre
y el gran Calderón en análisis, que era de Mendoza
03:44
@leo En serio!?!?!?!? La fromula de Rodrigues es de un Argentino!?! WOW!
Me parece tan elegante esa formula. Es increiblemente bella.
leo
leo
Creo que sí
voy a revisar
Alberto Pedro Calderón (1920-1998), fue un relevante ingeniero y matemático argentino. Calderón se destacó como investigador y docente en el campo de la matemática pura. Es conocido por sus trabajos sobre la teoría de las ecuaciones diferenciales en derivadas parciales y sobre los operadores definidos por integrales singulares. Este concepto su vez ha dado origen a la actual teoría de operadores pseudo diferenciales. También son importantes sus trabajos sobre la interpolación de operadores y sobre los problemas inversos. Las técnicas desarrolladas por Calderón son de importancia fundame...
@leo Rodrigues era Francés
leo
leo
@PeterTamaroff Jaja la de Rodrigues no. Es decir, ese Rodriguez era francés: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olinde_Rodrigues
@leo Jjajaj si.
Igual creo que lo de Calderon es mucho mas relevante.
Jonas debe de conocer su trabajo bastante bien.
leo
leo
@PeterTamaroff En algún lado escuché que era argentino
@PeterTamaroff si, seguramente
04:03
@DylanMoreland Hey.
@Leo Maybe this is what you were asking Jonas? here
Hi Peter.
@DylanMoreland What are your graduate studies?
@DylanMoreland The properties Bill and you exploit here seem to resemble those of the $\gcd$. Is that a generalization?
leo
leo
So the torus is $\Bbb R/\Bbb Z$ as groups
@leo That is the unit circle, too :-)
@PeterTamaroff Well, I'm not sure. My answer just uses what prime ideals are, really.
leo
leo
04:14
are they isomorphic groups?
@leo Yes. Use the exponential map!
leo
leo
ok I see.
@DylanMoreland Well, primes are a special case of prime ideals right? Or something of the sort?
@PeterTamaroff Like it's true that the ideal generated by $a, b \in \mathbf Z$ will be $\gcd(a, b)\mathbf Z$.
leo
leo
Is that the way as the torus is defined?
04:16
What does $$\gcd(a, b)\mathbf Z$$ mean?
leo
leo
@PeterTamaroff Thanks!
btw
@DylanMoreland Is it something like $\mathbf Z / n \mathbf Z$?
The ideal generated by that number.
Is there an equality or identity on that page that screams out to you?
@DylanMoreland I just know basically nothing about abstract algebra. It just rang a bell, that's all.
I'm just a freshman =)
@tb Even though you are on break, I thought you might want to look at this question. You are after all, the highest ranking answerer for :-)
04:22
Well you're learning some number theory now. I think that's a good avenue for understanding this sort of thing. Kummer and Dedekind invented these concepts to try to deal with rings of algebraic integers.
And in Dedekind domains, which is what those rings are, the analogy is really tight. Every ideal factors into products of prime ideals. And you have g.c.ds of ideals and all this stuff.
@DylanMoreland Ooh! Bezout! :-)
@DylanMoreland Bill says I overuse Bezout.
@DylanMoreland Nice!
I'll keep rowing.
But in general... I mean as a dumb example you have in $\mathbf C[x, y, z]$ ideals $(xy)$ and $(xz)$. So the g.c.d. of those elements is $x$, but I don't think that's even in the ideal that those two elements generate.
@DylanMoreland Are you studying for a Master's?
I'll pick up a masters at some point this year. But that's some formality on the way to a PhD. I hope.
@robjohn I think I might too. It's the only trick I ever remember. I'm sort of bad at elementary number theory.
04:30
@DylanMoreland Usually I invoke Bezout when there is a threat that big guns are being aimed at elementary results. I worry about circular arguments.
Often Bezout can be used as a replacement for using the FTA (a big gun).
@robjohn Right. I us FTA a lot. I think the proof is so simple, the theorem can be used with no worries. I don't know if it is a big gun actually.
@PeterTamaroff If proven correctly (which uses Bezout) then worries are minimal. However, I never know how FTA was proven to people.
@robjohn First, the prime decomposition theorem is proven.
Then, by induction, the FTA is proven.
FT of Arithmetic, that is.
04:56
huh. interesting that all this conversation on number theory so happened on my day off.
@robjohn is your mother in law alright?
@Eugene 'sup dawg.
nothing much.
@Eugene Is Wilson's theorem important? And Wolstenhome's?
i haven't heard of the second one.
$$\sum_{k=1}^{p-1}\frac{(p-1)!}{k}\equiv 0 \mod p^2$$
05:02
nope never heard of it.
@Eugene BTW I've been meditating about this
I think I can try and enunciate one sufficient condition.
Which might then apply to the Harmonic series.
However, I can't find the relevance of the result.
i don't see why this is interesting even.
@Eugene That's what I'm saying! =D
well if you enjoy it that's all that matters i guess.
@Eugene That's a bloody good reason, dude!
How are you doing?
05:08
ok. i've been doing mostly my own stuff today. also i'm heading off to bed now cause i'm quite tired. bye!
leo
leo
I'll go to sleep as well
@PeterTamaroff buenas noches
good night all
@Eugene It was not a stroke, but she does need to have a pacemaker. I am not sure how serious a surgery that is.
05:47
The profinite completion of the integers can be realized as a direct product of the p-adic integers. I wonder if this can be generalized. Is any inverse limit (indexed by a countable, locally finite poset I) decomposable as a product of inverse limits (over linearly ordered subposets of I)?
@anon I see the words on the screen, but they are bouncing off my brain.
turn your reflectors off
oh, I thought Dylan was in here too
@anon Interesting question.
What's a locally finite poset?
meaning for any $x,y$ with $x\le y$ the set of elements $u$ with $x\le u\le y$ is finite
Aha. Thanks.
06:01
then again that might be superfluous
That isomorphism is more or less the Chinese remainder theorem, so I guess you'd have to figure out when that will get you something in other cases.
I was thinking linearly ordered meant locally finite for some reason when I asked the question
@DylanMoreland For that approach I'm worried might be too inevitably tied to the objects' structure in the system, which we don't have access to in general.
What I was thinking is that we can "cut out" linearly ordered posets from the index set, throw away scraps without changing the limit, and then use some kind of inductive reasoning on this process.
After reading some of keith conrad's group theory notes, whenever I see the letters "xkcd" I'm going to think it's some kind of edgy alter ego of KCd.
Hey guys.
yo JM
Just came from the post office. The swag's neat.
06:06
indeed, I wore it for like a week straight
The mug's huge; I'd definitely be buzzed for the whole day with that much coffee...
Morning : )
Hi Matt.
I see, the doughnut is gone.
@MattN I'm doing CMC surfaces for the time being. :)
06:18
: )
Actually locally finite would be necessary, because otherwise we can have empty inverse limits.
(Talking to myself.)
actually that breaks countableness too, nevermind
Is \frac12 really an "improvement" over \frac{1}{2}? I think the latter is more readable myself.
I agree. But when I want to type a question and I'm keen to get an answer then I'm in a rush and I use the former.
some user named Frank Science made a couple of edit suggestions (still pending) with these improvements. the only other thing touched was ln-->\ln (which is an improvement, but I'm not sure if I should decide it's "substantial" enough to approve..)
I'm not sure either. If it changes nothing else though I think I'd approve it.
Ok, see you all later!
06:36
nah
that just means they are pushovers that will agree to do things asked of them
rather than vain and appealing to each other's egos or whatever
@anon Not worth the extra rep, methinks.
I upvoted the two top answers, I think I'm going to accept mutual admiration society.
what is with skull and removing messages
In other news I was recently suspended. That was intriguing.
3
I remember being there when that extended rant happened; the only mods at the time were Mariano and Bill...
But I don't think they're that touchy.
Jasper Loy swooped in and told Jordan off after the ban, so I assume the flag hit people from other chatrooms and they're the ones who made the decision.
I always get flags from the Gaming chatroom for example.
And it's always the same user that gets flagged ...
@anon That place is about as noisy as the bar at Happy Hour...
06:46
whoah, when did gaming.se get renamed?
Speaking of Mister "waah I can't do math!!!1!", I finally found the psychological term of art: "learned helplessness". Yeesh.
When did $E = (mc)^2$ become a true statement?
It's not a true statement. The OP of that question is simply wondering how one would say $(ab)^2$, as opposed to $ab^2$, in oral English.
The product of $a$ and the square of $b$.
Or you could say "$a$ $b$ squared" for the latter and "the square of $a$ $b$" for the former.
06:53
You may want to put a comma in $a$, $b$ squared :D
but I don't pronounce commas so...
I don't remember commas ever being pronounced in mathematical stuff...
I have heard people pronounce "periods" as in "End of argument period "
I just noticed I didn't put a "." at the end of that^ sentence.
;-)
Wikipedia: Learned helplessness can also be a motivational problem. Individuals who have failed at tasks in the past conclude erroneously that they are incapable of improving their performance. This might set children behind in academic subjects and dampen their social skills.
@JM Where did you learn about that term?
@J.M. I have a question I'm thinking about asking on main. What do you think? That is, given a map $f:M_n(k)\to k$ (with $k$ some field) such that $f(AB)=f(A)f(B)$ for all matrices $A$ and $B$, is it necessarily the case that $f$ factors through the determinant, i.e. does there exist a multiplicative map $g:k\to k$ such that $f=g\circ\det\,$?
07:10
If you know the value of $f(A)$ for matrices of row operations and for upper triangular matrices, the map $f$ id determined uniquely by the choice of these values, right?
@anon IMO it seems interesting. I would say it is worth posting a question on main.
By Guassian elimination that sounds right.
Can we decompose upper triangular matrices as a multiplicative monoid in some straightforward fashion?
IIRC Strang defines determinant by listing a few properties and than saying that these properties define determinant uniquely. So I was thinking perhaps something along the lines could be useful, if we are trying to prove this.
Alternating multilinear sending the identity matrix to unity - this determines $\det$ uniquely I believe.
Also you could define it coordinate-freely as the trace of the $n$th exterior power.
(Of a linear map.)
07:20
@MartinSleziak I'd been reading The Psychology of Everyday Things again, and those words just stuck out from the section I was reading on why people feel helpless about using complicated devices. Which is what math is to a number of people, I guess.
@anon Yes, sounds like a good one. I don't have an answer offhand.
I posted this in IRC a couple years ago, and I just remembered it.
Someone uploaded a pdf with a (supposed) answer but I don't remember where to find it, and I never read it.
07:42
Guys, is it wrong to say $$ \sqrt{x + 4} \times \sqrt{x+4} =\sqrt{16+8 x+x^2}=\sqrt{(4+x)^2} = \pm(x+4)$$?
\sqrt{(4+x)^2} = \pm(x+4)
But, $\sqrt{x + 4} \times \sqrt{x+4} \neq (x+4)$$ right?
the square root function on reals is always nonnegative, not multi-valued
hey, I have a question
shoot
if $Q$ is a nilpotent matrix, i.e. $Q^2 = 0$, and $S$ is another matrix (but invertible), if $QS^{-k}Q = 0$, does it follow that $k$ can be any integer?
07:58
you can edit your comments within a 5 min (ish) window
thanks
Hi
how to evaluate this
@JaydonZhao Do you mean (a) that if $QS^{-k}Q=0$ for some $k$, then $QS^nQ=0$ for all $n$, or (b) that just knowing that $QS^{-k}Q=0$, it's impossible to determine what $k$ can or can't be?
@experimentX Expand $u/(1+u)^2$ in a power series (with $u=e^x$), use linearity to make it a sum of integrals, scale each integral so that you get Riemann zeta times a gamma function.
@anon: I meant (a) i.e. it will apply for any $k$
Oh ... Haven't worked with Riemann zeta function!!! Thanks ... i'll try and report
08:03
specifically I was wondering if it is valid to premultiply and postmultiply by $Q$
and then observe that the statement will hold for any $k$?
since the appearance of $Q^2$ will reduce it to $0$.
multiply what by Q?
$QQS^(-k)QQ = Q0Q$
That doesn't change the power of $S$ though.
sorry I mean
(edited previous equation)
ugh, let me repost
someone's new to $\LaTeX$ :)
08:07
$QQS^{−k}QQ=Q0Q$
haha, yeah I sometimes forget about {} and ()
Still, that doesn't change the power of $S$ and so proves nothing, right?
hmm...I guess so
so you would say that (b) is true?
just from that statement alone
I would guess that - in a situation where neither $Q$ or $S$ are known - no alternative value for $k$ could be ruled out, but that's a gut feeling ...
@experimentX Erm, I forgot that won't work because of e^x being really big and all. :) You'll have to move it around so you get a convergent power series first.
further, if we were also given that $S^{-1}Q = QS^{-1}$ through a process of reforming $QS^{-k}Q$to $S^{-1}QS^{-k+1}Q$ until $-k+1 = -1$, where we have $S^{-k + 1}QS^{-1}Q = S^{-k}Q^2 = 0$
08:16
@experimentX nah, not when $|u|>1$, which is the case when $u=e^x$ and $x>0$.
Oh ... so what do we do in this case??
would that prove it is true for any integer $k$?
@experimentX $$\frac{e^x}{(1+e^x)^2}=\frac{e^{-x}}{(1+e^{-x})^2};$$ it turns out to be a symmetric function :)
Hmm ... , can we expand it now??
yes
08:19
$ |e^-x| $ is < 1 for x>0
thank you ... i'll try and let you know where i get stuck
@experimentX when you get stuck, refer to the line here with $\displaystyle \left(1-\frac{2}{2^s}\right)\zeta(s)$ in it. :)
thank you!! :)
You are farsighted :D
@JaydonZhao Yes that works. $S^{-1}Q=QS^{-1}$ says that $S^{-1}$ and $Q$ commute, hence powers of $S$ commute with $Q$, hence $QS^{-k}Q=Q^2S^{-k}=0$.
@anon: okay, thanks! :)
@anon what to do with these coefficients?? link
Series form of u(1+u)^-2 is $ \sum_{n=1}^{\infty} u^n(-1)^n n $
can i integrate this?? as $$ \int_{1}^{\infty} u^n (-1)^n n dn $$
besides what to do with that (-1)^n
08:36
@experimentX $$\begin{array}{c l}\int_0^\infty x^2\frac{e^x}{(1+e^x)^2}dx & =\int_0^\infty x^2\sum_{n=1}^\infty n(-1)^{n-1}e^{-nx}dx \\ & = \sum_{n=1}^\infty n(-1)^{n-1}\int_0^\infty x^2e^{-nx}dx \\ & = \sum_{n=1}^\infty n(-1)^{n-1}\int_0^\infty \left(\frac{x}{n}\right)^2e^{-x}\frac{dx}{n} \\ & = \left(\sum_{n=1}^\infty \frac{(-1)^{n-1}}{n^2}\right)\int_0^\infty x^2e^{-x}dx \\ & = \left(1-\frac{2}{2^2}\right)\zeta(2)\Gamma(3) \\ & = \frac{\pi^2}{6}. \end{array}$$
Oh ... amaizing!!
Thanks ... you so much ... though it wasn't my question ... I learned a new thing !!!
no prob
user19161
@anon The way I say it is quite different, infinitely more refined than yours!
Infinitely you say...
... he said infinitely more...
refined.
08:47
I guess the way Jasper says it must so refined as to be dense in the reals.
@anon How about "intellectual co-masturbation"?
comasturbation is not a real word, and if you asked a category theorist to guess what it should mean I'd be afraid to hear the answer.
@anon Well, the more I try to refine it the further away I get from the intended meaning... until it becomes infinitely refined as to be dense in the reals ;-)
do you receive rep for edits? :S
low-rep users receive +2 for suggested edits that are approved by higher-rep users. (this does not include Michael - we can make whatever edits we want freely with no incentive except badges and our names on others' posts) I don't remember what the specific threshold is.
what is ∫dx/x, ∫du/u, ∫dz/z, ∫da/a, and then, as the clincher, I'd ask about ∫d(cabin)/cabin. Some of them would grin amiably and shout out "log cabin", and they were surprised when I told them that I didn't agree. The right answer (as I learned when I was learning calculus) is "house-boat", "log cabin plus sea".
I remember that one.
That's a good example of a teacher being one-step ahead of the students.
While teaching them how to walk ;-)
09:19
@anon It seems to be 2k, see here.
I thought it was 4k; so I am not sure whether they changed it, or I remembered it wrong.
thanks
As I've checked now, I have earned 66 reputation from suggested edits.
lol, I earned 2 I think
How to display math equations in chat?
Eh?
@FrankScience See here.
09:28
I normally just link straight to this, saves time.
I guess you're right.
Also it's starred on the right star panel (as well as stickied by robjohn, the room owner).
I just wanted to write that the easiest way is to follow alternate installation link from robjohn's post.
Does the link from robjohn's page work for chorme too?
@FrankScience I remarked on your suggested edit a little while ago.
@MartinSleziak Yes, it's what I use.
However if you've just installed chrome you need to check "Show bookmarks bar" in Wrench > Bookmarks.
Since there used to be Matt N.'s post with a solution for Chrome. Now I see that it's deleted.
09:31
Sorry, I'm using Firefox.
Not a problem.
Even better.
and vimperator
is that like a cross between an imp, a vampire and an operator?
ah, addon
It's vim-like
Let me try.
$\frac12$
$\TeX$
09:37
you will most of the time need to click the bookmark manually to parse the latex (and have to repeat this ...)
Well, unless you use Zhen Lin's version.
I'm looking for a keyboard macro in vimperator.
Can I use Geasemonkey?
I don't use GM, so I can't help you there...
09:59
Let me test again.
$\frac13$

« first day (681 days earlier)      last day (4635 days later) »