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01:38
@Koro {0.111...}?
I think I should ask how do find inverse of that function?
Everything seems to be trivial after that.
is this that same thing? the inverse function sends a subset of N to the real number whose kth decimal place is 1 or 2 based on whether k is in the subset or not
and yes, proving that this thing is an inverse would be, under fairly general principles, the full story of why the function itself was a bijection
02:03
@leslietownes you can say that I just set it to binary because it seems that they deal with binary when their instructors teach them. I am dealing it as pset instead so I made it easier for other to relate to.
seriously how would find the inverse of set thing. Unlike number to number mapping function.
Now it seems that my brain was asking for inverse instead of proving bijection.
@NotTfue as per the definition you gave, this should go to $\mathbb N$. No?
Suppose that we have $g_1=:g$, where $g_a$ represents quadratic Gauss sum. Then why is $g^q\equiv g_q \pmod q$?
@DLeftAdjointtoU
$g_a:= \sum_{t=0}^{p-1}(t/p) \zeta ^{at}, \zeta$ is pth root of unity.
(,) is Legendre symbol.
And we also have $g_a= (a/p) g_1$
So how do we get $g^q\equiv g_q \pmod q$?
The book does something along the following lines: $g^q= (\sum (t/p) \zeta^{t})^q \equiv \sum(t/p)^q \zeta^{qt} \equiv g_q (q)$. I don't understand how the second equivalence follow here?
02:37
@Koro I was thinking you asked preimage of P(N) under f.
element empty set
Any ideas?
Hades, I posted a solution to a geometry problem. Why weren’t you on it days ago?
@TedShifrin wait. Where??
03:04
@TedShifrin very straight forward
Cyclic quadrilaterals. They're all similar. But, since they all have the same area, their dimensions must also be exactly equal. This logic follows for every quadrilateral
I just saw this problem now
@NotTfue No, I asked pre-image of the emptyset $\emptyset$, which is an element of $P(\mathbb N)$ so for surjectivity, you need to have a preimage for that. No?
 
2 hours later…
04:46
@冥王Hades Cyclic quadrilaterals are all similar? Aren't cyclic quadrilaterals just quadrilaterals inscribed in circles?
04:58
No, @robjohn, but these are because of angles :)
So they're squares, which are cyclic, but not general cyclic quadrilaterals
05:16
Watching the Space-X crew 6 launch countdown
T-18 minutes
05:34
We were looking at the corner quadrilaterals, not squares.
awesome launch
@copper.hat I am watching on YouTube
i guess i am too.
just incredible
6 months in space
that is amazing
05:50
In orbit. Still about a day until ISS
06:05
it is really aweseom.
06:24
It seems many graduate students don't care that much about their coursework (at least in my college). Rather, they focus more on their own studies for their research field.
07:06
it bugs me when people state that something is obvious math.stackexchange.com/q/4650413/27978
07:17
@冥王Hades Yes, it's 45°. But it's easier to do it analytically, using the difference of tans formula. You have atan(1) = atan(3) - atan(1/2). So it's kind of related to:
Dec 17, 2022 at 13:54, by PM 2Ring
Here's a little diagram that illustrates that $\tan^{-1}(1)+\tan^{-1}(2)+\tan^{-1}(3)=\pi$ and $\tan^{-1}(1)+\tan^{-1}(1/2)+\tan^{-1}(1/3)=\pi/2$.
@NotTfue I use the ChatJax bookmarks in the Samsung browser. In recent versions, you need to put the bookmark into the actual bookmark bar, or into a folder in the bookmark bar.
@Semiclassical Your rotated ellipse reminded me of a nice thing from orbital mechanics. For an elliptical orbit, what shape do you get when you plot $(\dot x, \dot y)$ ? IIRC, you can solve it just from the polar equation of the ellipse, and conservation of angular momentum, which can be derived from Kepler's "equal area in equal time".
Greg Egan mentions that problem in his short story, In the Ruins, which is a scathing attack on the dumbing down of maths & physics in schools, YouTube / Instagram / Twitter culture, and his hatred of terms like "geek" & "nerd".
07:51
Is $f(x)=|x|+x$ an even or odd function? I'm pretty sure it's neither but I'm double checking because I don't want to give a different answer to the students than what the answer key from the supervisors says, only to get it wrong for them
 
2 hours later…
09:32
Why am I struggling so much with systems of linear equations? I am getting the wrong numerical answer like 80% of the time '(
@CottonHeadedNinnymuggins neither
09:47
Spivak has an exercise in sequences:
"Prove that if a subsequence of a cauchy sequence converges, then so does the original Cauchy sequence".
But isn't every cauchy sequence convergent?
 
2 hours later…
11:54
@PrithuBiswas it depends upon 'where' the sequence is.
@Koro I am considering sequences on the reals.
If you mean you're taking Cauchy sequence in R, then yes the sequence converges.
@PrithuBiswas That's true. Still, this should be relatively easy to prove directly from definition (without using the result that every Cauchy sequence converges).
Moreover, you can use the same proof in situations where this result isn't available. (I.e., if you're working in some metric space and you do not know whether it is complete or not.)
@MartinSleziak Oh that is interesting. Thanks for sharing =)
12:12
@PrithuBiswas The result you mentioned doesn't give it's full power in $\Bbb{R}$. As every cauchy sequence is bounded and every bounded sequence has a convergent subsequence.
13:19
Hello! I posted this question yesterday, there has been only one response since then. Also, the question has not been converted into a community wiki (which I thought might happen). Is there something wrong with this post?
@robjohn Correct. But, in this particular case, they all have the same "angle configuration", in other words, the same shape, meaning they're similar. Now, since they also have the same area, their dimensions must also be exactly the same. You might say that isn't necessarily true since two sides could be altered yet the area could still remain the same. Correct, but then they're no longer similar. We already know they're similar, therefore they must possess the same dimensions
Once you establish this logic, its easy to figure out that $x=1u^2$
@PM2Ring isn't this the general case?
13:48
@TedShifrin After I finished watching the launch, I figured everything out. Sorry for the confusion.
@CottonHeadedNinnymuggins note that $f(1)=2$ but $f(-1)=0$, whereas being even/odd would require $f(x)=\pm f(-x)$. So yeah, neither. (The first term is even and the second is odd, so the sun won’t be either.)
14:15
@冥王Hades Yeah, I worked it out and made a graphic after the Space-X launch.
I renamed the second $P$ to $R$
15:05
@Thorgott mind if I ask you sth regarding a computation with the Ext functor?
15:49
This solution is wrong. Right?
Retract definition is written incorrectly.
Just one try
Ok I am dead now bye guys see you next year.
I will do this every year but after 20 times some of you guys won't be alive ;_;
I feel sad for this that after 20 years we will lose a lot of people who spent decades to forge their math to this level.
don't worry AI will make it all pointless anyways
hey, maybe even sooner than in 10 years!
dw in case you lose the bet you won't have problem reattaching with AI-assisted surgery
maybe 3d printers will become advanced enough to do some magic in this area
truly, the future is a wonder to behold
16:12
@shintuku Where is the proof of this statement? I am a mathematician where is proof!
it is in the fear in your heart, my friend
@Mouse Please Ban me too.
I want to start from 0 too.
@ShaVuklia sure, just ask
@shintuku I kindly reject this proof.
Have a nice day @shintuku I hope I can just
@Koro It's terribly written
16:15
sleep peacefully without any theorem.
so terrible that I don't care to read enough to tell you whether it's wrong or not
@Thorgott Good luck
Cools, so I'm trying to show the following: let $R$ be a commutative ring, $A=R[x]/(x^2-1)$ where $x$ acts by 1. I've already shown that $\text{Ext}^n_A(\mathbb Z/2,\mathbb Z/2)\cong\mathbb Z/2$ for $n\geq 0$ as a special case. Now I want to show for general $R$ that $\text{Ext}^{2n+1}_A(R,R)=\text{tor}_2 R$ and $\text{Ext}^{2n}_A(R,R)=R/2$ for positive $n$, while $\text{Ext}^0_A(R,R)=R$.
The surjective map sends $x$ to $1$ btw, and the injective map is inclusion. The case $n=0$ I've shown too. I tried to mimick my proof for the special case $R=\mathbb Z_2$ where I considered I short exact sequence, which in the general case would be
$$
0\to R(1-x)\to\frac{R[x]}{(x^2-1)}\to R\to 0.
$$
By the long exact sequence for $\text{Ext}$ it would suffice to know what $\text{Ext}(R(1-x),R)$ is. I could also invoke the isomorphism $\frac{R[x]}{(x^2-1)}\cong\frac{R[y]}{(y(y-1))}$ in which case the kernel would be $R(2-y)$, which might be easier to work with. At this point I'm stuck thoug
Also, I read the definition of Ext yesterday, so I'm not very agile with it yet and might be missing sth obvious
16:36
ok, I think now that I shouldn't be constructing a short exact sequence like I did before, but instead just construct a free resolution
I have an idea what I could try, Imma do that
after thinking about this and missing the mark for a while, I agree that's an excellent idea
I see now that this is essentially the group cohomology of $\mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z}$, but with $R$ instead of $\mathbb{Z}$ as base ring
the SES you wrote down already gives you the end of a free resolution
perhaps it's better to write it as $0\rightarrow A(1-x)\rightarrow A\rightarrow R\rightarrow 0$
there's an obvious surjection $A\rightarrow A(1-x)$, so take the composite $A\rightarrow A(1-x)\rightarrow A$, figure out its kernel and continue
yes, that's what I'm doing now indeed
if I'm not mistaken, I get multiplication by (1-x) and (1+x) alternately
I'm now applying the hom functor to compute the homology groups
yup, that's it
there's a fun algebraic topology perspective of this, too
you can view $S^1$ as a space with $\mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z}$-action by rotation and equip it with the obvious equivariant cell structure (two $0$-cells, two $1$-cells). the SES you wrote down is essentially the result of computing the cohomology of $S^1$ with $R$-coefficients from the cellular complex associated to this structure.
16:54
I think the following solution is also wrong riemannianhunger.wordpress.com/…
also note that the alternating structure of the resolution even without computing anything implies that the Ext-functor will take 2-periodic values!
it seems to be assuming $gpfg\simeq g\implies gpf\simeq 1$, which is plain wrong.
Is there a solution manual to Hatcher's?
I want to memorize some solutions.
Many people in my class are planning to leave the course/college due to pathetic teaching here.
koro, it does sound horrible. even when eyewitness testimony is discounted somewhat by the usual 'eh, someone is complaining about math on the internet'
you should see how they set question papers for exam- uneven distribution of chapters.
and consider it a good luck if they tell which book they are following.
What is more pathetic is that some of them don't tell the book as if they themself created the concepts!!
some even go on to say -you won't find this anywhere...
do professors have very robust job protection? some of the stuff you've related makes me wonder why they haven't been fired. tenure in the USA is pretty robust, but even then, people can get fired.
or at least, shuffled away from teaching responsibility.
17:06
yes, very robust. they can't be fired.
so, where do i apply for a job at this institution?
as a student it sounds horrible, but as a professor i think i could enjoy it.
you may check the website.
My last job was also super secure. I could not be fired, no matter what the pandemic.
"so, what attracted you to apply to this position?" "the possibility of robust job protections. i understand that once you get sufficiently in, it's basically impossible to be fired, and that is very appealing to me."
2
@leslietownes I mean, tenure is not intended to prevent folk from being fired for cause, or laid off if there is no money or if a department is eliminated.
one teacher last semester for example didn't tell which book he followed (said he didn't follow any and implying that he created all that on his own), or didn't give any assignments or tests. Because if he gave assignments or tests, then his hands would get tired by verifying all the answer scripts.
17:14
@XanderHenderson yeah. most of the stuff koro mentions seems like it would get someone out the door pretty quickly in most places i have experience with in the USA.
'so screw them, my salary will get credited on last working day of the month anyways' is what he probably had in mind.
some of them studied from some US universities.
I won't be surprised if the US universities kicked them out from the US for such lethargic behaviour.
that's actually usually my line, for bullshit detection, when people complain about teachers on social media. there's a perception that "tenure means you can't be fired," which is inaccurate, and you see people going on US social media and saying all kinds of things that would, in real life and not a social media post, actually get someone fired.
but i trust koro.
Our institution is looking at spending money to get access to plagiarism checkers. I just learned that students sometimes copy-paste papers, and change only certain characters in order to defeat plagiarism checkers. E.g. replacing "o" (a Latin/English character) with "о" (a Cyrillic character).
i really think this insulation of lethargic behavior from consequences is something we should import.
oh yeah, that's the 101 of defeating plagiarism checkers.
That said, tenure is a more robust protection than what you find in many other industries. Of course, the downside is that academia does not, generally speaking, pay all that well (compared to "industry").
@leslietownes I'd never heard of that before.
17:18
my wife's school has a license for one of the big ones. it is good for what it does. but, the people who most rely upon plagiarism are not the people who do it subtly, and most of them could also be found out via google search.
But that kind of plagiarism is so far out of scope for what I do.
using special characters is next level stuff that frankly i would not penalize. in my own ideal world.
my wife's department has had to go through a process for getting rid of someone that is certainly a lot longer than the process my employer would go through for getting rid of me
@XanderHenderson Just goes to show I’m not cut out to be a cheater. That would never have occurred to me.
17:20
@TedShifrin inorite?
ted who stole his whole book from do carmo and just rewrote it in "his own words".
2
Seems like it is easier to just write it yourself...
that's the thing, if you put in the effort and meaningfully defeat something put in your way to stop you, i say, well done.
@XanderHenderson there are some websites where you can paste something and see if it's been plagiarised from somewhere.
@leslietownes Ï åģřēĕ ŧōťāłłŷ
17:23
Some of the websites also tell how much % of the pasted content is matching with some existing content on web.
@Koro Yes, I am aware.
so it seems to me that the software (plagiarism checker) is not of much use.
The thing is, if you are grading lots and lots of papers, you really don't want to have to go through the copy-paste (into Google, into some free online thing, or whatever). In an ideal world, you can just run papers through your LMS, and be done with.
So once we hired an agency for getting a report prepared on something based on survey. I saw the content and they had copy pasted pretty much everything.
they didn't even bother to change the words 'sequestration of carbon' into their own words!
that means -no survey was done by them.
yeah, like xander says, it is just a volume thing. at scale it makes sense to have something root out the obvious stuff.
17:28
I mean this is an honest answer.
😅
:63102939 I don't know how common it is for someone to directly ask "Why should we hire you?" but if I asked that question, and if the candidate said "Don't", I would get up, shake their hand, and thank them for their time.
haha
Those kinds of jokes are not appropriate for an interview.
anyways, I lost my interest in the question and its answer, whatever it is. So I had deleted the comment. :(
i would see a question like that in an interview process as a red flag. i've heard of stuff like that in some workplaces. all of them toxic
17:33
@leslietownes Indeed. I feel similarly about a lot of those "puzzle" questions.
@Koro That sounds quite sad. What are you planning to do then?
"What can you bring to our team if we hire you?"
::tick tock::
an organization that goes through the trouble of personally interviewing people without apparently already having an answer to that question is performing some toxic ritual and is not a good workplace. unless it's so small that they can't meaningfully pre-screen applicants, in which case, just hire your founder's brother and see how that works out.
@user2236 Well, you've read my CV. If the answer isn't in there, I don't know what to say. Good day, sirs and ma'ams.
@Xander That's a good way to get unhired. I learned when I tried that at a college interview (at one of the top schools in the country). The admissions interviewer asked me something I'd written explicitly about in my application, and I said as much. "Didn't you read my application?" ... Guess where Ted was not admitted.
17:45
@TedShifrin Yeah, but that is very different from a very general question like "Why should we hire you?"
Well, I think it gives you an opportunity to show you've read up on the company and have some thoughts about what you can bring to the table. I don't think that's a bad question.
in ted's day you just interviewed with the president of the university you were applying to. it sounds logistically complicated, but it wasn't, he lived two caves over.
By the time they are interviewing you, they should have already figured out why they want to hire you.
But you have to show that you care enough to know something about the company. Same thing applies to people applying to graduate schools.
i think it's a horrible question. it says "we're either engaged in some hazing ritual, or we have time to pay people to interview folks who might as well have come off the street."
17:47
@TedShifrin Again, all of that should be in a cover letter and cv. If they are asking something so general in an interview, it seems like they haven't done their due diligence. i would be very concerned about working for an institution which doesn't do their homework.
Well, then, we're back to my undergraduate interview issue.
I would reiterate my strengths relative to the particular job.
ted may be limited here by his generation, and i'm not kidding for once. these days, an interview is like a huge step. 10000 filters ought to have been applied before the interview.
@TedShifrin I'm not saying that your are wrong, but I see the question itself as a red flag.
i say this as someone who has applied to dozens upon dozens of jobs and progressed somewhat through the process without getting interviews.
If they are asking that particular question, it makes me feel that I probably don't want to work their.
17:49
that's not something that has an analogue from 1920 or whenever ted was doing this.
@leslie You mean colleges or jobs? I was doing interviewing for MIT — they give every applicant an interview, either on campus or with alumni all over the world.
Yeah, jobs is a different thing. And I expect the MIT situation is unusual. Certainly Berkeley and UCLA do not grant every undergraduate applicant an interview.
if we're talking about a process where every applicant gets an interview, erase everything i just said. my stuff is in the job context, where every applicant ought not to get an interview.
Yeah, of course jobs are different.
17:50
@leslietownes Indeed.
UC undergraduate does not interview at all for admissions purposes. they do, or did, for some UC-wide scholarships.
It's been 35 years since I taught at UCLA, but there were definitely no interviews for undergrads.
i would just say, put your application on tiktok and we'll see who gets the most views.
let the market decide.
18:27
@Koro I hope that you can make it through that situation.
18:45
I'm having a bit of trouble with this proof:

Prove that if $\sum\limits_{n=1}^{\infty} x_n$ converges, then $\sum\limits_{2n}^{\infty} x_{2n} + x_{2n+1}$ also converges.
I'm thinking about maybe using the definition for a Cauchy sequence, but not entirely sure.
Since $\sum\limits_{n=1}^{\infty} x_n$ converges. It's Cauchy, so $\forall \epsilon > 0$, there exists $M \in \mathbb{N}$ such that $\forall n \geq N$ and every $k > n$, we have $\sum\limits_{j=n+1}^{k} x_j < \epsilon$.
Are you interpreting the latter as the sum of two sums or as the sum of $x_{2n}+x_{2n+1}$?
The sum of $x_{2n} + x_{2n+1}$
Your summation should not be over $2n$.
Lol, typo
It should be from $n = 1$
Write the second summation with a different index, $k$.
What is the partial sum with $k=1,\dots,N$?
18:53
You mean like: $\sum\limits_{k=1}^{\infty} x_{2k}+ x_{2k+1}$
Referring to your first comment
Need a second to think about the other one
Assuming I've understood:

$S_{2k} = x_2 + x_4 + x_6 + ... + x_N$ and $S_{2k+1} = x_3 + x_5 + x_7 + ... + x_N$

So $S_{2k} + S_{2k + 1} = x_2 + x_3 + x_4 +... + 2x_N$
fantastic ;-;
What is $S_3$ exactly?
The sum from x_1 to x_3
No. We’re talking about your sum on the right, with $k$. Write out the terms explicitly.
19:06
analogous to the smooth manifold case, if $f:U\rightarrow X$ is a topological embedding , where $U$ is contained in $X$, is $f$ locally an inclusion?
$(x_2 + x_3) + (x_4 + x_5) + (x_6 + x_7)$
Good, Under.
@monoidaltransform What does the question even mean?
Under, so what is $S_N$?
In the smooth manifold case, every smooth embedding is locally an inclusion
19:09
Ok, so $S_N = (x_2 + x_3) + (x_4 + x_5) + ... + (x_{2N} + x_{2N + 1})$
so locally, the smooth embedding is given by $(x_1,...,x_n)\hookrightarrow (x_1,...,x_n,0...0)$
Right, @Under. Give the first series a name for its partial sums and compare.
So the point is that the image is locally flat, monoidal.
locally flat?
19:11
Yes. A flat plane.
You need the inverse function for this.
Yes. In the smooth setting it's just due to the immersion theorem. But I was wondering if there is an analogous result for just topological embeddings $f:U\hookrightarrow X$, for $U$ contained in $X$.
Nope. There are wild embeddings.
@PrithuBiswas I'm not leaving.
@PrithuBiswas Thanks :-).
Suppose that X and Y are homotopy equivalent, X is compact. What's an example when Y is not compact?
Can I say open disk?
X= open disk, Y={center of the disk}
X is not compact, but Y is.
X is contractible to Y so X is homotopically equivalent to Y.
@Koro Take $\mathbb{R}^2$ and a point
19:22
Yes. What’s a more interesting example?
yeah, that will also work @monoidaltransform. So disk is also correct, right?
We have simple-connectedness either way.
yes. In $\mathbb{R}^n$, yes.
:)
How do I prove that removing a point from a Torus gives me a space that is homotopically equivalent to wedge of two 1-spheres?
@TedShifrin $S^\infty$?
I know that $S^\infty$ is contractible.
Why do we need a contractible example?
I memorized the proof sometime back why that is so.
19:27
What is homotopy equivalent to $S^1$?
Ohh. Because for 'homotopy equivalent', I can visualize only 'contractible spaces or homeomorphic spaces.
That’s a terrible weakness.
I mean apart from the above two categories, I don't have examples for homotopy equivalent, only the definition.
What deformation retracts to a circle in the plane?
@Koro that's why I asked this.
I think the plane itself could do it?
Because $x\mapsto x/|x|$
19:30
Right map, wrong space.
ohh
@UnderMathUate Did you finish?
19:48
for any space $X$, $X$ and $X\times\mathbb{R}$ are homotopy-equivalent
if $X$ is non-empty, the latter is non-compact
Sshhhh.
I don't know what happened to $x/|x|$ ... it disappeared.
@TedShifrin that usually means "shut up and calculate" :-)
20:21
If A,B,C are nxn matrices where C is invertible and B is symmetric positive definite, is it possible to show that ABC is antisymmetric implies AC is antisymmetric? I have a feeling it's not true and an easy counterexample will be demonstrated to embarrass me so I can move on.
Sorry, A is the arbitrary matrix, apologies.
20:34
@TedShifrin Most of this week's calc exam is questions of the form "calculate the limit; if it doesn't exist, write $\pm \infty$ or 'DNE', as appropriate". I gave them $\lim_{x\to 0^+} |x|/x$ as a problem. We'll see how that goes. I went over precisely that problem in class; I'm guessing that only half the class will get it.
Depends how much you beat left- and right-hand limits into them.
Will go really well if the students frequent the math.stackexchange chat and recognize their instructor.
@TedShifrin The answer is always "not enough."
@anak Honestly? I would love it if that happened.
I think that, if I had my druthers, I would not talk about $\varepsilon$-$\delta$ limits in calculus. I think that I would talk about sequential limits---this is what they tend to do, anyway, when getting an intuition for limits. So the order of instruction would be (1) limit of a sequence, (2) one sided limits (because those are kind of natural sequences to think about), and then (3) two-sided limits.
I would, at least, like to experiment with that approach.
I never taught $\delta$-$\epsilon$ in regular calc.
21:02
@anak Virtually anything $2\times 2$ will give you a counterexample. Just take an easy diagonal $B$, an easy invertible $C$ and solve for $A$ so that $ABC$ is the easiest skew-symmetric matrix. $AC$ won't be skew-symmetric.
21:22
@TedShifrin I am required to talk about $\varepsilon$-$\delta$ by state articulation agreements.
Some idiot mathematicians decided on that.
Hi, how can I study the continuity of the map $t\mapsto f(t):=\sup_{k\in N}\frac{t^k}{k!}$?
I was trying to find just the supremum, but no progress.
here I am considering $t\in R$
21:44
I can see that each map $t\mapsto \frac{t^k}{k!}$ is continuous, then the sequence of functions $(f_k)$ defined by $f_{k}:=t^k/k!$ is a sequence of continuous functions.
Trying to generalize: if $(f_k)$ is a sequence of continuous functions, then $\sup_{k\in N}f_{k}(t)$ is a continuous function?
21:59
@冥王Hades How do you know they're all similar?
Yes, they are cyclic and have the same area. But why do matching angles imply similarity?
 
1 hour later…
23:17
I am looking to express that some integer $x$ is both $\geq 0$ as well as $\equiv 0\Mod{2}$

How do I properly express/define this?
@HoushouRattengod what about $x \in 2\Bbb{N}$ ?
I was just trying to think about how to say that but was having a brain-fart
or even positive number
$x \in \Bbb{E+}$ ?
Here $2\Bbb{N}=\{2n \,| \, n\in \Bbb{N}\}$
@HoushouRattengod I think it might be ambiguous, it's better $2\Bbb N$
23:23
Right, cause $\Bbb{E}$ doesn't imply $\geq 0$
@HoushouRattengod mate what is $\Bbb E$
Set of Even Integers
Or, that's what I thought it meant
listen here houshou you can't just make up notation
I didn't make it up. I picked that up through study.
ok i'll allow it this time but make it your last
23:29
Do you wanna shot me now or later?
Because I'm the guy with no formal maths education, trying to write a proofs paper from a visual proof I created. And I have absolutely no idea what I am doing, if I'm even doing it right
Checkmate Galois
@HoushouRattengod i was kidding
i'm no one
... I'm not.

I'm trying to self study, so I have this spreadsheet I created and I'm just trying to learn by doing. And by doing, I mean. Converting what I see on this table into mathematical equations and describe what is going on.

But damned it all if learning LaTeX ain't the hardest thing to do. Trying to describe multiple infinite sum series and their patterns from a Spreadsheet is.
23:56
Maybe this ist more philosophical, but can IT be that a certain Insight ist better understood from a 1d creature thank from a 2d, outside of what IT feels to be in the former
Add the General case

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