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00:00 - 18:0018:00 - 00:00

00:08
yeah.
@PM2Ring As long as people don't act as if statistics will somehow remedy this problem, I'm fine.
it's tough to replace calculus, if only because that is as far as most k-12 teachers ever go. can't swap that out without an enormous amount of retraining.
abstractly i think linear algebra makes OK sense as a replacement for calculus. clarinetist and i have talked about stats :)
great ideas, but the teacher skill set isn't there. so here we are with a heaping pile of calculus.
I wish that the cookbook "teach ~10 functions on the TI-83/84" stats classes would cease to exist.
i won't say 'steaming' pile, but it is a steaming pile.
It is an injustice to the entire field, and makes data science seem extremely elementary, when the reality is quite different.
00:11
Some people can't do basic fraction stuff. We had a question yesterday on Astronomy asking how to calculate how often 2 planets line up if you know how long each planet takes to go around the Sun.
The department chair of the department in which I used to teach, who still teaches Statistical Modeling, has told me each semester he has to fight with students who insist on doing things like bootstrapping and logistic regression on the TI-83/84
So in a comment I linked them to the appropriate Wikipedia article, which has the formula for the synodic period $\frac1{T_{syn}}$ given the orbital periods of the two planets, ${T_1}, {T_2}$, which is $\frac1{T_{syn}}=\frac1{T_1}-\frac1{T_2}$. They complained: "That formula is too much for my limited math knowledge". Ok, maybe they got freaked out by the subscripts, but still...
Wataaa
ohuuuuuu wajaa wajaaa ohhhhhh
In fact, if you ask me, I think that TI's whole deal about throwing Python into its calculators is a disaster waiting to happen
Get those people into a proper CS course. Teach fundamentals.
I don't want to see another generation of people using x, xx, a, g, gg, etc. for variable names in code
Speaking of steaming piles, and data science...
00:15
@PM2Ring That is right on my fridge at home, lol.
but I use gg variable when making a video game in python
@BannedUser If it's your own stuff, fine. If you expect someone else to read your code... I have no words.
I love Python, but there's a lot of people learning it badly. Many schools now teach it instead of Java, but the teachers are still thinking in Java, so they end up teaching a strangely distorted Python with a heavy Java "accent".
@PM2Ring I'm glad I learned Java after 5 years of professional experience (C, R, Python, JavaScript, among others). It amazed me how different it is to most C-styled languages.
00:19
the way I write python would probably make any sane python programmer cry
in Python on Stack Overflow Chat, 2 days ago, by PM 2Ring
A really important part of writing good code that's easy to understand is coming up with good names. It didn't take me long to get ok at the logic of programming, but it took at least 20 years before I got ok at naming things.
in Python on Stack Overflow Chat, Aug 15 '15 at 14:14, by PM 2Ring
"There are only two hard things in Computer Science: cache invalidation, naming things, and off-by-one errors." – Phil Karlton & Leon Bambrick
I've learned a lot of languages over the years. I still remember large amounts of some of them. ;) I was writing C for at least 25 years before I touched Python. But I learned IBM 360 mainframe assembler 6 years before I even knew C existed, so learning pointers in C was easy for me.
I must admit I use one letter names in Python for things like simple for loop indices, and for temporary variables that get assigned and then immediately used once on the next line or two. Otherwise, I try to use meaningful names.
The exception is if my code is implementing a standard maths or physics formula that has standard well-known variables. If I write a generic quadratic equation solver, of course I'm going to use variables named a, b, & c.
00:37
Imo mit has the best course in python
well mit is best at everything
 
1 hour later…
01:38
i hate c++ i have been using it for almost 4 decades.
c++ is like a limitless playground with no safety features. the swingset over the pit of broken glass? why not.
i'm going to buy booze tomorrow just so someone will ask me my birthday, so i can tell them it's my birthday and get happy birthdays from some stranger.
If you don't want the booze, get me some good gin and I'll come get it ;P
this would be a trip to bevmo, 5 minutes away, as distinguished from hi time, 25 minutes away.
LOL, poor old baby. And it's a 2 hour drive each way for me.
Besides, Bev-Mo has plenty of good gin.
01:53
they have hendricks which i like but is a little too nuanced for a lot of gin applications.
It is delicious, but goes best muddled with cucumber.
If one's doing very mixed drinks or gin and tonic, one shouldn't waste premium gin. I just don't get it that people do that.
yeah i mix cheap stuff and enjoy the good stuff on ice or with a breath of vermouth.
Damn, we agree yet again.
Although the vermouth might cause disagreement. Boissière or Dolin, but not much else for me.
Happy almost birthday, old man.
i can't have anything sweet with gin. it tastes like poisoned medicine.
or too sweet, i guess.
No, only the dryest of vermouths.
Hi @robjohn
02:00
dangerous convergence here
We now have someone posting (each and every?) homework problem in differential geometry for a "solution check." Granted, he's making full efforts. I'm just not used to this behavior. I dealt with the first problem very carefully; now I'm planning to ignore him.
@copper Indeed. Care to mutiny?
i'm always ready to mutiny...
Without any bounty?
I will abdicate to go cook dinner. Y'all hold down the fort.
i'm getting concerned, i search google for burgundy and it brings up lingerie. did i miss something? do people not drink burgundy anymore?
i think this is my daughter's doing.
mutiny anywhere, not just on the bounty
i would not mind a nice cognac now.
ROFL ... you need to throw out your computer and all your cookies everywhere on the interwebs.
I can offer you nice cognac, among other libations.
See youze later. :)
02:06
Enjoy dinner!
02:33
@TedShifrin Hey, Ted. How are things?
 
2 hours later…
04:18
nobody will ever know.
Nothing to know!
i'm going to be a prime age again. this seems good.
61, eh?
let's say 29.
i am prime, 61
i think i felt better when i was composite
04:35
my daughter turned from one prime age to another. i don't think that's happening again, but maybe some number theorist can fill me in.
reminds me of an irish april fool math newsletter on the search for other even primes.
it was socially conscious maths back in the 70s.
I don’t think that’s possible. You told me she was past 3.
she went from 2 to 3. she is past 3 in the sense of past 3.00.
I thought you told me she was 5.
Oh well. My next prime is 71.
she behaves as though she is, but she's 3 and 4 weeks.
04:46
My error.
her extremely specific yelling is indicative of a later age. we're already delving into those chapters of the child rearing books.
the commonwealth cocktail contains 71 ingredients apparently, maybe something to aim for?
Not my sort of cocktail.
i think i have only had french 75s and martinis. but i could easily have part of my brain erased inadvertently.
Of course.
04:50
ugh, that sounds like some even worse version of a long island iced tea.
in the first case my friend insisted because he was making them, in the second i wanted to see what bond found so interesting.
the best cocktail maker in our family is my surgeon brother who is a teetotaler.
05:01
Hello
:-|
Hello Professors
i'm not a professor.
05:17
None of us is, except Xander.
this is true
i was never a professor.
05:37
thank god for that.
i did ask for a rubber when was teaching once.
i can't imagine that ending well nowadays.
there was one user named somewhat like "why I am here" with description somewhat similar to : "this website was not meant for solving homework problem". He had very high reputation. Did someone has link to the user profile ?
you could go to the rep page and start working down?
got him
He was once suspended. Don't know why. Thus I wanted to know if suspension ended
i was suspended due to an interaction with said user. i still do not understand why.
05:51
lol
When someone is suspended, their reputation shows as 1
yes, it was 1 last time I visited his/her/other profile
now it's removed
the internet has irony that rivals any classic.
I got suspended on stack overflow today meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/412889/… Thus I am visiting profiles of all users who were suspended previously
as a result of the suspension, i started drinking white wine again.
05:55
it gives me relief to see high user getting suspended
but I don't and won't drink wine/tea/coffee. Only warm water
maybe you need a suspension?
I already got
on SO
you mean here ?
@copper.hat Tea is a suspension
i have always found stack overflow to be truly obnoxious if you answer a question.
i love tea :-) my wrx needs new suspension.
i find stack overflow very useful too.
@TheReal__Mike yes, on mse
SO is ruthless just like amazon work culture. But yeah it's useful
@copper.hat Why ?
This is only place on stack exchange which I like. I didn't do anything wrong
05:59
someone was making assertions of facts about me that were untrue.
and i found them rather disturbing.
"it gives me relief to see high user getting suspended" . By this I meant that stack exchange is not biased
I didn't meant to offend you
you did not in any way :-)
i am not particularly delicate :-)
Then why should I get banned ?
i might be after a bottle of pinot gricio on a bad day
did you get banned?
No you said that "yes, on mse"
@copper.hat here
06:01
i was suspended for a day
on mse
@copper.hat What assertion made on you ? And why you find it disturbing ? Often we don't like things which are true about our-self (this is true for me and I don't mean that it's true for everyone).
keep in mind that unlike some of the smaller sites where mods can dedicate more time to handling individual cases with more nuance, SO is quicker to decide someone isn't worth the trouble and just give them a few days' suspension to cool off
it is in the past and best belongs there :-).
copper was running explosives between dublin and belfast
i used to know a guy who flew arms around the country.
@TheReal__Mike the reality is that if the situation occurred again i would probably be suspended again. i react poorly to what i perceive as bullying.
and will not stand down unless the other person relents.
06:07
irish blood boils at relatively low temperatures
I find SO very unfriendly to people with low reputation. It has to improve. What you guys think of making a website similar to stack exchange where users get money proportional to votes for answering a question ?
i make a lot of noise sometimes which people confuse with temper. i have only lost my temper once and it was not a good day for the parties involved.
people are willing to build up voting rings of hundreds of accounts just for some meaningless internet points
imagine how bad it'd be if it gave real cash
copper.hat you can ignore those people but yeah sometimes things cross limit and we react to them. For me Ireland is best country in Europe due to lot of reasons which if I put I might get suspended for speaking against few other countries
i am a bit surprised that no site has appeared where you get questions answered for a fee.
06:12
hyper-neutrino, These things can be resolved in following way : Only allow people with verified professional email (see Blind website), or register people with phone numbers mandatory. Also vote will be not just +1 or -1 it will be proportional to amount of reputation user has
:-) i am a bit biased in that regard. my kids (who grew up in the US) just roll their eyes when the subject of my country of birth comes up.
one thing people tend to misunderstand about SE is the importance of reputation
people tend to trust users with big numbers next to their name more than they should
i think gamification generated off incentives.
I do agree that SO does have a bit of an issue with treating new users though. Its high volume means its moderation is harsher otherwise it'd be overrun with low quality posts, and a lot of the things that new users do wrong could be easily avoided if they just read the tour page
charlie munger had a lot to say about misplaced rewards
06:13
I saw a post on reddit of some guy complaining about how SO is super hostile and rude
and on their profile page
they had Peer Pressure and not Informed :)
" Its high volume means its moderation is harsher otherwise it'd be overrun with low quality posts". This makes sense
i answered a few questions on SO but gave up after some particularly abusive remarks (most since removed).
harsh moderation is different to abusive comments.
definitely true
harsh but fair is perfectly fine.
some people do seem to have a bit of a superiority complex, all around the network really
06:19
Also making a website where users get money for answering would be good since people here spend a lot of time answering question but they can't get any benefit out of it other than imaginary points. People need to get money for time they spend. That website can be extended for further domains like any advice related to something.
when i grew up in ireland, the country (republic) was divided into dublin and non dublin. the joke was that a dublin man with an inferiority complexwas one who thought that everyone else was as good as him.
people grow superiority complexity with success. On SE they develop with reputation points
@TheReal__Mike ultimately it needs money to run, so that would be the first concern.
i think it is wine o clock.
Yes, we can get investors for money. For example when paypal was founded it used to give money to user for doing transaction. However when lot of people joined it became profitable
what does the __ mean in your moniker?
06:21
I think an SE-like system with money
would just be SE but now every issue that ever existed with reputation
is much worse because it actually matters now
A lot of business models today work with bleeding the money first and then making profit
a lot of business fail because the bleed money and never make a profit.
people tend to be influenced by survivor bias.
same in equities.
^^. you won't hear as much about the majority of businesses that fail
A lot of business fail anyway. Anway you need to risk high for high reward.
have you ever started a business?
06:24
Even 90% percent business fail it's easier than to get into college in which I studied
only 1% out of million get into
are you ignoring my question?
copper.hat No. But doesn't mean I can't do good. Everyone starts first time. I will definitely start because I would never get married or have kids and it's easy for me
if your business fails you're screwed
if you don't get into that one college, you probably have other options, unless you only applied to one college for whatever reason
dont get me wrong, i am not saying that you cannot do good.
I mean losing money doesn't matter to me. I can just find another job and live
06:26
i am just saying that people underestimate the realities of business.
I don't have any family responsibility
then what motivates you?
a business can be a big responsibility.
copper.hat people also underestimate taking risk. How much time have you spend doing a business ? if you haven't spend time in something how can you say you are not good into it ?
Usually I build a habit and then sometime it motivates me to do it for long time
Yes, it's a big responsibility but atleast I don't have fear of failure
i have been involved in many startups.
they are fun. but hard work and i find them very high tension.
we find something hard if we aren't deeply interested in them. If we are interested we think about that even doing some other task. Also nothing rewarding comes without risk and hard work (also smart work)
06:30
in fact, you probably own devices that have chips that were designed with products that i (and others, of course) created.
the best way to make money is
to have wealthy parents.
very true
Don't make money priority. Make it as side effect of your work. I don't have wealthy parents but I am from 3rd world country (but with huge market). I have read about many people here as well as in USA who have made it without wealthy parents
i do too, but i would say that the majority of financially successful people i know come from relatively wealthy backgrounds.
by relatively, i mean with respect to their local populations.
it gives them a sense of confidence that it hard to gain otherwise.
it permeates their interactions with others. sad, but true.
If anyone has time, please check out math.stackexchange.com/questions/4299942
ehh, 10 mins is not a long time before putting out the bat signal!
06:36
Let me tell you story, I gave interview for software role and I got rejected even I was prepared very well since every time I was in fear and stress. But next day with another company I forgot everything and just focused on the problems they asked me. I succeeded. Don't focus on result, focus on process. Don't focus on money
my first job i intimated that i was a lisp expert and spent the next month answering questions to co workers with my wilensky book hidden in my drawer.
I am poor with respect to my own local population too.
i am not trying to discourage you.
All I got is I have few money through internships and I will start my job coming July
good luck.
06:38
thanks.
the most important thing is people.
That's true. Connections are very important.
I was introvert in most part of my college but now I have started talking to people
and liking people
yes, but i would suggest not to treat people as connections.
find something about them that you find interesting or that you value.
and remember that we all have flaws :-)
even me.
that was a joke :-)
Yes I have flaws. We should accept truth than satisfying lies
i had difficulty early on in business with marketing & sales.
06:41
and we don't need to be like robot or perfect. It's completely fine to have flaws
What difficulties you had ?
Recently I read "zero to one" by Peter Thiel and I would suggest people here to read it too if they want to get started with buisness
really good ideas
umm, how do i put it. you have to market something as a reality before it exists that to me is tantamount to lying.
however, i found that you can maintain your integrity and still portray an optimistic view of the future.
i am being a little coy here.
usually smart people find difficulty in "marketing & sales". But you need to be good in it or hire good people for it. But that doesn't compensate for bad product
yes, but early on you may have no product.
Build the product in silence with your team.Why you want to market it very early even before building it? Ask your college batch-mates and friends to use it after that and then market after that.
You want to share some more difficulties and failures you faced while doing business ? I usually like to listen about others mistake so I don't make similar
@TheReal__Mike these things are easy to say, but harder to do and to make money.
i did create a business that had 50+ people in a few countries before i left. it was sold to cadence who still sell the product (jaspergold).
it took many years and a lot of effort. and a lot of great people, including my co-founder.
if you can find a mentor (or many of them) then that will assist greatly.
06:51
On what idea you were working on ? Were you working on something that people really need or it was just for sake of making money (for example no one tells people to use SO but people find it on own because of it's quality and need) ? Did you started it when you were young (because our energy level (Testosterone) decreases with age and we become less focused)? Currently in India I see a lot of people doing startup and getting good results.
Ignore the "what idea you were working on part", you already answered it while I was typing
i wanted to create a business. i had already created products in a different field of EDA.
i was 38 when i started the company.
but i do not think it is a testosterone thing.
It's never late but you can't risk when you have kids and family to look at
i had two kids a few year into that startup.
i had no financial backup. i am not from a wealthy family. even by irish standards of the time.
Do you have enough skills for getting high paying job ? In my case even I lose everything I can get good job to live very good life with one Europe trip every year. That is what I said, you should risk when you don't have family. After you got family you have to think of savings and all.
life is rarely clean & simple :-)
i take risks. sometimes you lose as a result.
06:59
and that is what makes it interesting. Recently after securing job I started procrastinating for around 2 week and I found that "easiness" was damaging me.
we need breaks.
but it is best to take them actively rather than dawdling.
in my opinion
yes. But I took too much.
what is done is done.
You forgot one more thing other than wealthy parents to become rich. Bitcoin and Tesla stocks.
there is no point in thinking what things would be like if you did things differently, all you can do is learn for the next time.
risks abound in equities.
07:02
yeah.
i have twice in my life lost 2/3rds of my capital in the space of a week or two.
believe me, that is not a fun thing to happen.
Yeah man, it's bad. Any other important point or lesson from your life you want to give me ?
:-). i am happy to share, but i am not sure i have good advice :-)
That doesn't matter. If you have you can share. Good and bad depends on how we use it.
Some of your points like "wealthy parents", "risk" does makes sense
one should be aware of all these things and should know if risking is really for them or not
also, i think different generations/cultures have different perspectives/value systems
i think being honest with oneself is the hardest
07:07
Good point
not that you lie to yourself, but sometimes our egos need to take a back seat to reality.
Yesterday I thought to observe myself as third person to see what faults and bad things I have once every week.
i met a venture capitalist once who said "have fun, do good and make some money".
i like that :-)
i was in an article in the Deccan Herald once :-)
my cofounder was from New Delhi
super smart fellow, younger than me and now retired.
you should learn from him :-)
Nice to hear that. You are still young with lot of life experience and learning. You have advantage of that.
What he does ? No work now ?
isn't "no work" boring. Every one has own way of looking things but getting retired and not doing challenging things are like doing damage to muscles by skipping workout after you got 6 packs.
In India a lot of people are very smart but they die in inner competition itself (very huge population).
I am going to sleep shortly! Good night & good luck!
07:18
Anyway, very nice talking to you copper.hat. I would really say you are very nice person and very down to earth in your life. I wish you do many other great things in your life :)
I am also leaving for Lunch. Bye
That is sweet of you, but I am not all nice :-).
 
4 hours later…
10:54
@TheReal__Mike I think that's a bad idea. In fact, Stack Exchange was created as a free alternative to sites that hide answers behind a paywall, principally Experts Exchange. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experts_Exchange As well as the reasons given by hyper-neutrino, paywalls also make it harder to detect cheating and plagiarism. Another paid service notoriously associated with cheating is Chegg. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chegg
@hyper-neutrino There have also been attempts to buy & sell Stack Overflow rep for cash. See meta.stackoverflow.com/q/410831/4014959
 
2 hours later…
13:25
Is there a trick to proving this?
I tried to turn it into telescoping sum without luck
there must be something im missing here, can anyone figure out what it is? Let $\mu_j,\nu_j , j=1,2$ be measures on measurable spaces $(\mathcal{X}_{j},\Sigma_{j}), j=1,2$ and suppose $\nu_j << \mu_j, j=1,2$, then without $\sigma$-finiteness we shouldn't be guaranteed $\nu_1 \otimes \nu_2 << \mu_1 \otimes \mu_2$, but i seem to get the wrong answer and find that it holds without $\sigma$-finiteness as follows:
consider $\{A \in \Sigma_1 \otimes \Sigma_2 : \mu_1 \otimes \mu_2 (A) = 0 \rightarrow \nu_1 \otimes \nu_2(A) = 0 \}$, as far as I can see, by definition of $<<$, if we can show this set is $\Sigma_1 \otimes \Sigma_2$, we get the required claim
so this set contains all product sets of the form $P_1 \times P_2$, $P_i \in \Sigma_i$, because if $\mu_1(P_1)\mu_2(P_2) = 0$, then $\nu_1(P_1) = 0$ or $\nu_2(P_2) = 0$, and so $\nu_1 \otimes \nu_2 (P_1 \times P_2) = 0$
the set of such product sets generates $\Sigma_1 \otimes \Sigma_2$, so it remains to show our set for which the desired property holds is a $\sigma$-algebra, i.e. we need to show it is closed under countable unions
oh, ignore my question, i figured out my mistake
uh wait, no i didn't, maybe there isn't a mistake: Let $A_j$ be in our set. Then if $\mu_1 \otimes \mu_2( \bigcup_{j \geq 1} A_j) > 0$, $\bigcup_{j \geq 1} A_j$ is vacuously in our set. So assume $\mu_1 \otimes \mu_2(\bigcup_{j \geq 1} A_j) = 0$, hence each $\mu_1 \otimes \mu_2(A_j) = 0$, and each $\nu_1 \otimes \nu_2(A_j) = 0$, thus $\nu_1 \otimes \nu_2 ( \bigcup_{j \geq 1} A_j) = 0$, and $\bigcup_{j \geq 1} A_j$ is in our set
but then our set contains the empty set, and is closed under countable unions, and is therefore all of $\Sigma_1 \otimes \Sigma_2$, because it contains all product sets
so we have shown that if $A \in \Sigma_1 \otimes \Sigma_2$, and $\mu_1 \otimes \mu_2(A) = 0$, then $\nu_1 \otimes \nu_2(A) = 0$, hence $\nu_1 \otimes \nu_2 << \mu_1 \otimes \mu_2$, by definition of $<<$
so where is the error here?
oh great, I forgot the definition of sigma algebra
never mind what I said
we need $\sigma$-finiteness to deal with the closure under complementation
uhh and also for intersections actually, we'd need tonelli here
13:59
oh, i just realized tonelli kills the entire problem, no need for messing around with $\pi$-systems of rectangular sets
 
1 hour later…
15:03
I am trying to find the spectrum of the operator $A : \ell^2 \to \ell^2$ defined by $$A(x_1,x_2,x_3,...) = (x_1+x_2,x_2+x_3,...).$$ I was able to show that $0,1$ are in the spectrum (in fact, they are eigenvalues). However, I am unable to determine if there are more spectral values. I could use a hint.
15:16
@user193319 without thinking too much: if $c$ is a prospective eigenvalue, you can set up a recurrence relation for the values in the sequence
And then hope to show for what values of c the solution to said relation gives a sequence with finite l2-norm
That probably only works if the recurrence relation is simple, but that seems to be true
$x_{n}=c(x_n+x_{n+1})\implies x_{n+1}=(1/c-1)x_n$
What is the infimum for
That seems straightforward to find the l2-norm for
the supremum looks to be 1/2
Simpler question first: is the sequence strictly increasing/decreasing, and if so which one
@Semiclassical Yeah, I tried that with, e.g., $c=-1$, but the sequence $(x_n)_{n \in \Bbb{N}}$ from the recurrence relationship won't always (ever?) be in $\ell^2$. Plus, there might be spectral values which aren't eigenvalues.
15:24
@Semiclassical it's increasing
Hmm..let me think about what you're saying some more...
@user193319 what’s your definition of spectrum vs eigenvalues? I’m used to the finite dimensional case where they coincide
@Semiclassical maybe that wasn't for me?
@Anush right. So where does the sequence have its smallest value?
@Semiclassical n = 1 where it is 0
assuming 0 is not a natural number
15:25
A spectral value $\lambda$ of $A$ is a value for which $\lambda I - A$ is not invertible. In the finite-dimensional case, every spectral value is an eigenvalue.
Right—at the start
So that’s your inf
But in the infinite dimensional case, this isn't always so.
ah ok. thanks
15:26
Could I get some help in completing my attempt of proving Cauchy's theorem from Runge's theorem?
@user193319 gotcha
So the obvious thing to me is to to use algebra to construct such an inverse
And figure out when that construction fails
fin
fin
15:55
can anyone help me with this?
my approach was to write $\vec{x} = (x, y, \sqrt{1-x^2-y^2})$ which works but i feel like it could be a lot more elegant
16:11
Solve the linear equations first, then worry about unit.
fin
fin
oh wow
linear algebra is really useful stuff
Hello, if we have a sequence of natural numbers $1,2,3, \cdots, 2^n$, we would like to take any 2 consective numbers $a_i, a_j + 2^k$, where $k$ is positive integer, then the average does not lie between them as $\frac{a_i+(a_j+2^k)}{2} = \frac{a_i+a_j}{2} + 2^{k-1}$ does not lie between them. I am stuck at why does not lie between them please?
16:31
math.stanford.edu/~ralph/math215c/solution4.pdf There's a pdf file on Google about hatcher exercise 3.3.22. But during the proof, it uses relative M-V sequence without checking interior covering condition. Since the space $X$ in concern is an aribrary topological space, I think the solution is problematic. What do you people think?
16:52
Sup gang, I have to give a presentation on a famous math theorem, its history, and its proof for my math history course. Any ideas?
Hello!! Is someone of you familiar with relational algebra?
You have to come up with the ideas. We can't know what topics in mathematics you know deeply enough to do this. Very few undergraduates would have any understanding of most of my favorite theorems.
I have posted my question also in the main :
1
Q: Converting Relational Algebra into Relational Calculus

Mary StarLet $R$ be a relation with column domains $\{A,B,C\}$ and $S$ be a relation with column domains $\{A,B,C\}$. Give for the following expressions of relation algebra the equivalent expression in relational calculus. $\sigma_{B=A}(R(A,B,C))$ $ \ \ \ \ $ [Selection from $R$ subject to conditio...

@TedShifrin Oh yeah, I guess I hadn't considered that. I originally wanted to do Fermat's Last Theorem, but one of my classmates took it before I had the chance to notify my professor. I guess I'm looking for stuff along that vein. I'll get to Googling, lol.
The proof of Fermat is super advanced/difficult. But the theorem itself and some of the history might be accessible (like the case of cubics).
17:06
Yeah, I was just going to do an overview of the process Andrew Wiles went through as he came to it. There probably wouldn't have been much regarding the proof itself.
@TedShifrin the identification of $T_f Diff(\mathbb R)$ with $C^\infty(\mathbb R^n,\mathbb R^n)$: is there an easy way to see this? I know at $f=id$ then you get the Lie algebra of vector fields on R^n.
I'm kind of interested in Godel's Incompleteness Theorem, but I'm a little worried that my understanding and explanation will be incredibly off-base.
@UnderMathUate how much model theory do you know?
None, as far as I know.
Might be a little much to present. It is one of those theorems that gets thrown around too much in pop math and misrepresented. It's best addressed after learning a bit more formal logic and model theory, but you really have to keep your audience in mind.
What sort of math fields are you already knowledgeable on that your peers have a good chance of also being somewhat knowledgeable on?
17:14
I'm only in my second-year, whereas the majority of my peers are in 3/4th year. So the topics I'd feel pretty confident presenting are calculus, discrete math, and linear algebra.
@UnderMathUate what theorems or ideas in math do you already marvel at, yourself?
@UnderMathUate If you know some discrete math, personally, Kneser's conjecture using Borsuk-Ulam theorem would be nice. Historically, the proof of the conjecture connects topology and combinatorics (starting point of topological combinatorics)
Well, I liked when we learned about The Well-Ordering Principle as in my discrete math class. I can't say others might find it so interesting, though.
@love_sodam Oooh, I haven't heard of those.
Ah dang, I forgot I had a meeting. Thanks for the suggestions guys, I'll take a look at those and think more on some of the theorems I enjoyed from my courses.
@UnderMathUate have you seen much about Zorn's lemma before?
There are an array of "set theory" results that were historically interesting and are super accessible.
Zorn's lemma, Cantor's infinite cardinals/ordinals, Cohen's forcing argument for the CH (this needs model theory, but there is a nice paper by Timothy Chow that doesn't involve it too much), results from Zermelo and Frankel about set theory, etc.
17:57
some version of the spectral theorem in linear algebra is a great theorem. maybe not the world's deepest thing, but conceptually very deep. and cool applications like the principal axis theorem.
what's clear and alcoholic and equivalent to the axiom of choice? zorn's zima.
feel free to repeat that one. we need new math jokes.
Heh.
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