« first day (4689 days earlier)      last day (332 days later) » 
00:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

7:01 PM
So the lazy man approach to the topic, that is me, is to say it's connected because all my books say so
 
@TedShifrin Pardon for the bad usage of the term "two variable". I mean its image is in R^2 and the domain is [0,1]. I look the curve as a function of t and take its derivative with regard to any t in the domain. Let me emphasise that this is not necessarily the same as the slope of tangent line. Like the circle (sin(t^2),cos(t^2)) that has tangent line everywhere but (in my definition of) derivative has a (0,0) derivative at t=0.
I mean taking simply the derivative of the components at each point. This is how Pugh defines derivative; from the domain to the Linear transformations, and each linear transformation is represented by a matrix (Here it is a 1x2 matrix)
 
Anyhow, Farhad, you should understand what Balarka wrote.
We all know what Pugh does. I have written a book on this material, too.
 
@TedShifrin ok I will read that.
@TedShifrin So it seems your definition of derivative is different from what is in my mind, and perhaps that's the root of confusion. What you mean by derivative of the curve is having tangent line at each point with slope dy/dx regardless of parametrization?
 
@shintuku you shouldn't insult people that aren't rude to you in the first place, that's just bad :|
 
eh, he was rude to me, scroll up
what a pretty day it is today
 
7:08 PM
@shintuku I didn't talk with you at the first place. I thought Ted was ignoring and I sent him a message. You jumped in the middle from nowhere talking about freedom and the ways of the world.
And I never insulted you in the first place. Getting some downvotes (which nevertheless I will remove right now, for you to feel happy) is nothing compared to calling me a monkey or other things.
 
do you tag me because you like the way i talk to you? or can you not read, like the simple animal you are?
 
@shintuku seems you started it by calling them a monkey
 
Both of you, shut up.
 
@shintuku Bro, read my message. Why did you at the first place intervene in a thing which was not related to you? It was an issue between me and Ted, and finished peacefully. Don't continue.
@TedShifrin Ok professor.
 
@Farhad I am never talking about $dy/dx$. I did talk numerous times of a tangent line to the curve.
 
7:12 PM
@shintuku And you were wrong, too. (t^3, t^2)$ is infinitely differentiable.
 
yes it is
the resulting curve is not
 
Indeed, the point is "tangent line". And the definition is what I have given above.
@shintuku Complete nonsense lol
 
The whole point is that the notion of smooth curve is very subtle without the language of submanifolds.
 
omw to compute the differential of the circle
 
Huh? Salut @Astyx
 
7:16 PM
@Jakobian finally
 
@BalarkaSen I'll issue a correction @Farhad: I meant $\ell \cap U$, not $\ell \cap C$, at the end here. Small typo.
 
@Jakobian I don't really think so, but I understand why you wouldn't wanna think about it
 
Salut Ted
 
However, I don't think "I'm lazy and don't wanna think about it" is an argument addressing the actual points of contention
 
Laziness is a common technique.
 
7:21 PM
@BalarkaSen huh? it has no tangent line at the cusp, how is that complete nonsense
 
What does "differentiability of a curve" mean? Typically it means someone has given you a parametrization of the curve, and that parametric map is differentiable. I know of no other definition.
The correct notion is that of a "differentiable submanifold".
 
huh, good to know, thanks for the comment. i thought it was enough for there to be a tangent at all points of the graph
 
The notion of "tangent line" also has to be defined appropriately, it's not trivial to give a proper definition.
Why isn't the $y = 0$ axis a tangent line to the cusp point? In many situations, it is.
 
wouldn't we expect it to be tangent if and only if there is a single point of intersection?
 
I want to find all connected subsets of R with cofinite topology.
 
7:29 PM
$y = 0$ intersects $\gamma(t) = (t^2, t^3)$ at a single point. Namely, at $(0, 0)$.
 
I think these are just all finite subsets of R. But I'm getting stuck while trying to prove it.
 
hm and then again a single line through a random point somewhere on the plane could have a line intersecting it and we wouldn't want to call that tangent
 
@shintuku Also, abysmally false. $x = 0$ intersects $y = x^2$ at a single point, $(0, 0)$. Certainly not tangent line to the parabola at $(0, 0)$!
 
Take a finite subset $F$. Let $F= A\cup B$, where A,B are disjoint open in F. There exist U and V open in R such that $A=F\cap U, B=F\cap V$.
$A^c\cap B^c= F^c$ is infinite so $A^c, B^c$ both must be infinite.
not sure how to show either A or B to be empty.
 
@BalarkaSen right, that makes sense
 
7:32 PM
I should check this out on mse's previously asked questions.
 
It is bad to be wrong. It is worse to be wrong while agreeing to help someone. But the worst case scenario is to be wrong while agreeing to help someone, and then insulting them when they're actually saying the right thing, or even if they're just confused!
 
@BalarkaSen OK I read this. Thanks Balarka for clarification. In the second part, when you say "such that U∩C is a graph of a smooth function defined on ℓ∩U" what you mean is considering ℓ as diffeomorphic to an interval on the y-axis or x-axis
?
 
@BalarkaSen eh, you have your way of seeing things, but thanks for the clarifying comments
 
@shintuku You did not really say this!
 
heheh
 
7:34 PM
the tangents of a line are all the lines that are not parallel to it
 
So clearly $y=|x|$ has a tangent line at the origin and $y=x^3-x$ has none.
 
not just one, infinitely many!
 
Oh, indeed.
 
@FarhadRouhbakhsh You may choose an identification like so, but you may work abstractly as well. $\ell \cap U$ is a Euclidean line segment on $U$. Choose an orthogonal line $\nu$ to $\ell$ through $p$. $\nu \cap U$ is another Euclidean line segment on $U$. These pair of segments give a coordinate system on $U$, with $\ell \cap U$ as the $x$-axis and $\nu \cap U$ as the $y$-axis. There should be a smooth function $f : \ell \cap U \to \nu \cap U$ such that $C$ is the graph of $f$ over $\ell \cap U$.
 
Silly me.
 
7:37 PM
(By the way, I'm very happy you said the word "diffeomorphism", because once you confirm that the above is OK I will give you a different, much shorter definition of a smooth submanifold, in terms of that)
 
@Jakobian
 
Why did I get mentioned
 
I requested your opinion on:
8 mins ago, by Koro
Take a finite subset $F$. Let $F= A\cup B$, where A,B are disjoint open in F. There exist U and V open in R such that $A=F\cap U, B=F\cap V$.
8 mins ago, by Koro
$A^c\cap B^c= F^c$ is infinite so $A^c, B^c$ both must be infinite.
7 mins ago, by Koro
not sure how to show either A or B to be empty.
10 mins ago, by Koro
I want to find all connected subsets of R with cofinite topology.
 
Finite subset of R in this topology will be discrete
Because it's T_1
Sorry didn't realize you were asking a question
Any infinite subset will again have cofinite topology
 
yeah, earlier I just 'dumped' a sentence here thinking that finite subsets are connected. But when I tried to prove that, I faced the above 'gap'.
 
7:43 PM
So connected subsets are infinite subsets, singletons and empty set
 
@BalarkaSen Perfect. I understood. So, if these two statements are equivalent, then I think in the problem we have assumed the \textbf{first part of} the first statement ,i.e, that the parametrized curve is infinitely differentiable and the higher order derivatives match up at 0 and 1. And then, adding the \textbf{second part}, that is, the regularity condition, we can use statement 2, that says at each point there exists a tangent line. And then of course the solution of the professor works.
 
what's separation of {1,2} for example?
 
Indeed, true.
 
{1} and {2}
 
One needs to demonstrate an equivalence. Ted is avoiding going into details because this is usually first lecture material on an intro to smooth manifolds course.
 
7:45 PM
ohh right
@Jakobian how did you conclude that?
I see why it is true.
 
@FarhadRouhbakhsh: I re-read Ted's answer; the second half of the answer where he justifies carefully essentially gives a proof. I will leave it to you to verify how.
 
But from the fact that it is T_1, I don't see that.
 
@BalarkaSen So far so good. Now the point where I get deeply confused is this: suppose we are given a curve $γ(t)$, but this time with a non-regular parametrization. That is, the curve is smooth with this parametrization, and derivatives of every order match up at 0 and 1, but there exists a point like p in [0,1] such that γ'(p) = (0,0). Then what happens? I want to know your comments up to here and after that I ask my other questions in this regard.
 
T_1 for me is a space in which finite sets are closed.
 
Define $γ(t)$ as you did in your comment.
 
7:51 PM
@FarhadRouhbakhsh Then you cannot guarantee situation (2). It may or may not happen. You gave the example (t^2, t^3) where it does not happen, there is no "tangent line" over which the little arc of the curve is a graph. But for your other example (cos(t^2), sin(t^2)) it does happen, there is a "tangent line" at (1, 0) over which the little arc of the curve is a graph.
It depends on the geometry of the image of the curve.
 
ohh i got it now.
 
@BalarkaSen Ok, you are talking about the existence of the tangent line. What I ask is about the result of the problem. That is, is there an example in which $γ(t)$ is smooth, derivatives match up, but γ'(p) = (0,0) AND that we CAN NOT partition it to finite arcs, each of which are smooth functions of one variable?
 
Let F be a finite subspace of T1 space X. Take any x in F. X- (F-{x}) is open. {x}= (X- (F-{x}) \cap {x} so {x} is open. $\ddot\smile$.
 
@FarhadRouhbakhsh I’ve answered this three times!
 
@Balarka Obviously, if the tangent line exists at every point, like the case of (cos(t^2), sin(t^2)), the answer is that WE CAN ALWAYS DO THE PARTITION. How about if it doesn't exist in one point?
 
7:58 PM
Only one point? Sure, no problem. It’s infinitely many that kill you. We’ve said this many times.
 
@TedShifrin Yes professor, but I feel I didn't get it fully. I need to reread your answers and contemplate on them. Fault on my side
 
Well, go work on it.
 
@FarhadRouhbakhsh: OK, I understand your question now. Yes, there are examples (and Ted may have talked about it before). The immediate thing that comes to mind is a a cuspidal curve, with infinitely many cusps accumulating to one point.
But you can cook up easier examples, I am sure.
 
I suggested a zigzag PL …
 
@Jakobian But I didn't understand why infinite sets are connected.
 
7:59 PM
Oh perfect, much easier.
One would need to choose an appropriate smooth parametrization, but it can be done.
 
I told Farhad how to approach it.
 
Splendid.
 
@BalarkaSen I want your comment on the example I had in mind. (Ted said it doesn't work), but I don't understand why.

"
For each interval in the x-axis like [1/n, 1/(n+1)], I define my curve as a semi-circle (drawn above the x-axis) with the diameter equal to the length of the interval. The semi-circles keep shrinking up to zero. At the endpoints (where x = 1/n) the curve has cusps, but I think it is also smooth there (not sure about that) because it is where the two tangent semicircles meet.
 
@Koro because they have cofinite topology
And infinite set with cofinite topology is connected for any two open sets intersect
 
Finite set can also be given cofinite topology, no?
 
8:06 PM
Non-empty open sets*
 
I understand that R with cofinite topology is connected.
 
@Koro yes but then it's discrete
 
ohh
 
Yes, I think this can be smoothly parametrized as well. This is what I meant by "infinitely many cusps accumulating to a point"
At each cusp, parametrize it like $(t^3, t^2)$. Then slow down the whole parametrization a lot as you approach $0$
Zero derivatives at $1, 1/2, 1/3, \cdots$ and at $0$.
It's a bit hard to write, but doable.
 
8:09 PM
@Jakobian I'll go to bed now. I'll think about this and get back to you.
 
Think about whatif we give R cocountable topology
 
@BalarkaSen I want to have a smooth parametrization of this curve (the image I sent) such that for all natural number n, the derivative at a point t in [0,1] such that γ(t) =(1/n,0) is equal to (0,0). Is it doable?
 
Yes. As I said, model each cusp where two adjacent semicircles intersect as $(t^3, t^2)$.
The only caveat is that the norm of the derivatives on each of the semicircles approaching $(0, 0)$ should become smaller and smaller (ie if you imagine a parametrization as a particle travelling on the curve going from $(1, 0)$ to $(0, 0)$ along your semicircular curve, the particle should keep slowing down as you approach $(0, 0)$)
This is to ensure $\lim_{t \to 0} \gamma'(t) = \gamma'(0)$.
 
@BalarkaSen Pardon for asking, but what do you mean by "modelling each cusp"? Do you mean writing an anylytical definition for it in each interval [1/n, 1/(n+1)], as for example we write "analytically" $(t^3, t^2)$ for for example t in [-1,1] and in the image of the curve we get a cusp at t = 0?
 
Yes
Of course, I am giving you a rough argument telling you that it's possible if you do everything right. It's annoying to actually do the writing; personally, I find the rough argument convincing enough.
 
8:24 PM
yes, thanks for giving me the direction. The point is, I don't know how on the world to parametrize a curve like this. I don't know even how to start. Yeah, analytically it's hard.
 
Some things are not worth doing analytically, in my humble opinion :)
 
hahaha perfect
But it seems I got my answer, nevertheless. The "character" of the examples are like this, having infinite cusps, regardless of how you write their smooth parametrization. Perhaps it is "easier" to write for the zig zag. But I don't know how to parametrize such that the zig zag stays smooth when changing direction. The reason I chose semi-circles instead of zigzag was that I thought with myself that circles "feel" more smooth.
 
@FarhadRouhbakhsh A family of polar bears disappearing over the horizon near the North Pole?
 
@robjohn what is that?
 
@FarhadRouhbakhsh the image referenced in the comment.
 
8:37 PM
Nice description
@BalarkaSen @TedShifrin Thanks for your guidance guys. I learned a lot from you. I wish all of my professors or teacher assistants or even my friends here in Iran were like you too, helping and open to silly questions XD.
Good night
 
Cheers, good night.
 
8:53 PM
Good night @Farhad.
 
9:20 PM
is $\mathbb Z/4\mathbb Z[\frac{1}{2} + 4\mathbb Z]$ unimaginably complicated or is there a way to introduce some order to it
i'm checking first whether it is actually a ring
 
9:41 PM
breaking the problem into smaller chunks: is there a way to sum or multiply elements of $(1/2)\mathbb Z$ to obtain a rational number with a denominator that is not a power of $2$?
 
Given a separated morphism $f:X\to Y$ of schemes, is it then true that $X$ is automatically separated?
the book I'm reading (Liu) seems to use this, but without explanation
I guess I could try to see if we have a map $X\times_Y X\to X\times X$ that is a closed immersion
Since by definition of separatedness we have that the diagonal map $X\to X\times_Y X$ is a closed immersion
hm I guess if we look locally, given a morphism of rings $A\to B$, the question is whether the canonical map $B\otimes_\mathbb Z B\to B\otimes_A B$ is surjective
I think it's an isomorphism, so that seems to work?
actually, I don't even need to check this
all I need to check is that the image of the diagonal map $X\to X\times X$ is closed. We know it's closed in $X\times_Y X$ by separatedness of $f$. So I guess I should argue that $X\times_Y X\to X\times X$ is a closed map topologically
 
9:59 PM
Certainly that's a closed map topologically, but I think a closed immersion is a little more than that, right?
 
(the ring map is a surjective actually I think, not an iso)
@BalarkaSen I don't think so
 
Closed immersion is closed topologically + surjective on structure sheaves
IIRC
 
yea that's true, but in the end all you need to check is closedness topologically
if I understand the result above correctly
 
That sounds wrong, but I am not an expert.
For affine schemes, maybe.
 
surjectivity on structure sheaves is a local notion
so in that sense I'm not surprised
 
10:01 PM
But closedness isn't.
Actually its not clear to me why it's closed either, because fibered product of schemes is different from the fibered product of the underlying sets IIRC
 
yea that's why we still need to check that $\Delta(X)$ is closed
but that's all there is to check, it seems
@BalarkaSen that's correct
 
If X -> Y is separated and Y is separated, then X is separated, yes?
Composition of separated is separated. I remember doing this stuff from Hartshorne with my roommate.
X -> Y -> pt
 
@BalarkaSen I have to think, 1 sec
so we have that the diagonal maps $X\to X\times_Y X$ and $Y\to Y\times Y$ are closed immersions
and we want $X\to X\times X$ to be a closed immersion
 
Composition of separated morphisms is separated. This is a standard result, you can try proving it if you haven't.
 
I am aware of that, but that's not what we're doing here, right?
oh
you're saying that
Y -> pt is separated iff Y is separted?
 
10:07 PM
Yes
 
ok, that's something I need to prove, but I can postpone that
now I follow your argument
 
pt being Spec k, or whatever. Spec Z, maybe.
 
@BalarkaSen i.e., yes
@BalarkaSen sure, thanks, I'll think about those details tomorrow
 
I think it may not be true without "Y is separated" as hypothesis. What about the identity map X -> X for a non-separated scheme? If there is any truth to the world, the identity map is separated.
 
oh right
it is indeed Spec Z
yea I'm convinced about that part now, it's by definition
@BalarkaSen that's a fair argument, let me see
we would have to think about what $X\times_X X$ is, no?
 
10:10 PM
Yeah.
 
I don't see why the diagonal would have to be closed
 
Locally, it's Spec (A o_A A) which is... Spec A
 
Btw, you can think of $\beta X$ as the maximal spectrum of $C(X)$
 
right, but locally we are already good
by the previous argument (that you find sketchy)
 
No, I mean X x_X X should just be the scheme X
 
10:11 PM
ohh
right ofc
universal properties
 
Then the diagonal map would be the identity which is closed and bob's your uncle
 
hmmm, ok, so you answered my question
 
@Jakobian Prime spectrum, I think? Maximal spectrum should be X again.
 
let me just cite the source that made me ask this question in the first place
 
mSpec C(X) = X for a compact Hausdorff space X
 
10:12 PM
X is not compact here
 
maybe there are some additional assumptions, since we do assume in $X\to Y$ that $Y$ is affine I believe
 
$\beta X = X$ for compact $X$, yes
 
Gotcha
Cool
 
yea, let's change it to that
say we have a separated map $f:X\to\operatorname{Spec}A$
 
10:12 PM
OK, then we're through, Sha
 
@BalarkaSen oh?
 
Because, as you quoted, all affine schemes are separated.
 
oh!!!!!
great
thanks :)
 
Prime spectrum is more non-Hausdorff because most spaces have non-maximal prime ideals
 
10:14 PM
(0)... :)
There's a dense point
 
(0) in general isn't prime in C(X)
should be prime only when X is a singleton (at least for Tychonoff spaces)
 
Ah, true. Because unlike algebraic geometry, C(X) is not an integral domain.
 
we actually know the structure of prime ideals in C(X) reasonably well
well, not entirely but we know some things about it
at least I do, the book I'm reading it from is pretty old
 
But again, $\beta X = \mathrm{mSpec} C(X)$ seems like a fancier reformulation of $\beta X$ as the closure of $X$ embedded in a product of intervals by all the continuous functions on $X$
The extra maximal ideals come from "the points at infinity"
The proof might be involved but it seems very believable once you take the latter as the definition
 
the latter definition feels crude
it's not elegant for me
 
10:23 PM
It's how you produce natural compactifications in other categories of metric spaces
 
how I learned you produce compactifications for (separable) metric spaces is so called Wallman compactifications, which is a twist on constructions with ultrafilters
you just specify a basis for closed sets that satisfies extra conditions and consider filter associated to it
in fact, the definition of Stone-Cech compactification I'm using uses filters too
 
Mostly, topologists who do not do point-set topology nod off when "filters" are mentioned.
There are some serious exceptions. But on the large.
Or, at large, I guess, is the correct phrase
 
the approach with ultrafilters is nice, because you just add all the possible "limits"
it's elegant and intuitive approach
 
For people sufficiently familiar with the theory of filters, I am sure
 
matter of getting used to it
 
10:31 PM
as most things
I learnt a bit of nets and filters because my undergrad topology course skipped the proof of Tychonoff, and I didn't really want to read the long proof in Munkres. I learnt it, proved the Tychonoff theorem using nets/filters, was shocked at how easy it is, and then never encountered more about nets/filters ever again.
The next I heard about them was in grad school; apparently one of many components in the proof of a long-standing open problem uses ultrafilters :P
 
@BalarkaSen No, that's something else.
 
Oh.
Correct usage would be "There's an ultrafilter at large in the neighborhood"?
Ah, there's also this, @Jakobian
 
Let $I=[0,1]$ be the closed unit interval. Suppose $f$ is a continuous mapping of $I$ into $I$. Prove that $f(x)=x$ for at least one $x\in I$.
Proof. Consider the line $y=x$ in $I \times I$. If the claim was false, then $f(0) > 0$ and $f(1) < 1$. By continuity, the set of points $f(x)>x$ would then be above $y=x$ and the set of points $f(x)<x$ would then be below $y=x$. The only possible point to connect these sets lies in $y=x$, so they cannot be connected. This contradicts connectedness of $f(I)$.
Is this writing rigorous enough?
 
I vote no
 
I second the no vote.
Apply the intermediate value theorem concretely.
 
10:43 PM
In particular, there's some murkiness in "The only possible point to connect these sets lies in $y = x$, so they cannot be connected".
 
How do we know that the unit square isn't really a Möbius strip? If it were, your claim would be false.
But now I'm sounding like Balarka.
 
I loved that comment.
 
Hm, ok. Thanks for the feedback. I am going to continue thinking.
 
Which comment, a Balarka? The "sounding like" or the Möbius strip? :D
 
@BalarkaSen I know of it, but I forgot where I encountered it. It might have been a set theory text
 
10:45 PM
Both :) Just joking, the Mobius strip comment.
Bottom line, I think point set topology is great. I would like to see more applications of the weird point set topological nonsense being used to study nicer spaces I care about.
Many exist, but more is better!
 
Ah, now I remember. I realized that the ultralimit of bounded sequence $x_n$ wrt ultrafilter $\mathcal{U}$ corresponds to the value of continuous extension $\beta\mathbb{N}\to \mathbb{R}$ at the point corresponding to $\mathcal{U}$.
 
Makes sense!
 
is there a way to sum and multiply elements of $(1/2)\mathbb Z$ to obtain a rational number with a denominator that is not a power of $2$?
answer: no
proof attempt: let $r$ be the result of sums and multiplications between elements of $(1/2)\mathbb Z$. then $r$ is the sum of simple terms $s_i = z_i/2$ with nonsimple terms $s'_i$, which are products of sums of simple terms.

Notice: any sums $\sum s_i$ of simple terms $s_i$ will be equivalent to an irreducible fraction with denominator 1 or 2. Therefore, any products $s'_i$ of $\sum s_i$ will have as a denominator a power of $2$.

Let $T$ be the nonsimple term of $r$ with the greatest denominator, and set all other terms to the same denominator. Then, $r$ is a fraction that has a denomina
now this is clearly enormous, there has to be a better way of proving this
 
Is there a way to characterize $\beta X$ in terms of all the continuous maps $\beta X \to Y$ out of it? Are these exactly the same as all set-theoretic maps from $X$ to $Y$?
That can't be right.
$X$ is a subspace of $\beta X$, so that conjecture makes no sense. There must be something else
OK, If $Y$ is compact, then every continuous map $X \to Y$ compactifies to a continuous map $\beta X \to Y$. Conversely, one can restrict.
Bit bizarre lol. $\mathrm{Hom}(\beta X, Y) = \mathrm{Hom}(X, Y)$??
 
11:08 PM
$\beta X$ is the unique compact Hausdorff space in which $X$ is densely embedded, and such that any continuous $X\to Y$ into compact Hausdorff space $Y$ has (unique) extension $\beta X\to Y$
 
Can one characterize maps out of $\beta X$ to possibly noncompact spaces?
 
A map $X\to Y$ still extends to $\beta X\to \beta Y$, and this should be a functor
 
There's no restriction the other way around
A map $\beta X \to \beta Y$ need not restrict to $X \to Y$
 
A map from $\beta X$ to a non-compact space can be made into a map from $\beta X$ to compact space by considering image of $\beta X$, is that what you mean? I'm not sure
oh, characterizing $\text{Hom}(\beta X, Y)$?
 
11:31 PM
@shintuku i've been told there's an algebraic argument hiding in here in terms of localization, any hints on how to take this direction?
hm... some sort of argument using localization at $(2)$ or $(2^n)$ maybe
 
is there any circumstance where analytically computing the derivative of a function is easier to do by hand than by computer?
i am trying to understand what result automatic differentiation gets you; sources online make it sound like automatic differentiation yields the exact derivative, but I guess I am skeptical of this
 
We have points such that $f(\alpha_x) = \min f(x)$ and $f(\beta_x) = \max f(x)$. Consider ${[\alpha_x, \beta_x] \times [\alpha, \beta]}$. The intersection of this set with the line $y=x$ is not empty. By IVT, we know that $f([\alpha_x, \beta_x])$ is in $[\alpha, \beta]$ and is connected. From the intersection, there is a point $(x,f(x))$ lying in $y=x$.
Is it better? I suspect, no. Still seems muddled.
What was the thing with Mobius strip comment? Was it related to my proposed orientations of my sets? I guess, you meant that "what if we twist that unit square"?
The lesson was that "do not use orientations"?
 
00:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

« first day (4689 days earlier)      last day (332 days later) »