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12:38 AM
~o~ flailing arms
 
That looks like he's dancing.
&dance;
 
ヾ( ͝° ͜ʖ͡°)ノ♪
 
$${\large O}\\\sim\boxed{\phantom o}\sim\\|~|$$
MathJax if you can't tell
 
I can tell, but SO chat can't.
 
I wish math.SE chat rooms had auto-running MathJax
 
12:44 AM
Yeah, that would certainly make sense. There's probably some meta post about it that you can put a bounty on.
 
can't put bounties on meta posts
 
You can on meta.SE
 
118
Q: Should chat have TeX support?

Marc GravellOK, so chat is now available... but; it has been suggested that for Mathematics we should have TeX support. The current TeX processing has some non-trivial client impact. Before I even attempt trying to hack this in, is this something that the community would want / use? (this would only apply ...

49
Q: Any chance of MathJax in chat?

MajenkoIt would be really nice to be able to use MathJaX (math formulas) in chat. Not specially for formulae, but for things like $V_{CC}$ in electronics chat would be very useful.

 
Thnx
you are fast with your fingers
 
12:48 AM
:) Somewhere between 110 and 120 usually.
 
I type fast but too loud
 
Too loud for what?
 
For school. Absolutely everyone complains
 
If I ever got a mechanical keyboard it would be horrible
 
12:50 AM
Get a sound-proof chamber to type in.
 
Heh
@SimplyBeautifulArt Can I have some help with something?
 
whoa, that ping sounded weird
 
Bong bing!
 
I'm not used to hearing SO pings, they sound different from SE pings
 
Yeah
It's more of a bing
 
12:59 AM
yeah
 
Anyways, do you know what vector projections are? The book explains them bad
Huh. 3B1B uses python for video animations
 
O.O Interesting
 
Yeah he even has an animation library
 
>>whatis vector projection
 
@zondo The vector projection of a vector a on (or onto) a nonzero vector b (also known as the vector component or vector resolution of a in the direction of b) is the orthogonal projection of a onto a straight line parallel to b. It is a vector parallel to b, defined as.
 
1:03 AM
I literally just read that lol
 
"defined as"... what?
 
hehe
The vector projection of a vector a on (or onto) a nonzero vector b (also known as the vector component or vector resolution of a in the direction of b) is the orthogonal projection of a onto a straight line parallel to b. It is a vector parallel to b, defined as

{\displaystyle \mathbf {a} _{1}=a_{1}\mathbf {\hat {b}} \,} \mathbf {a} _{1}=a_{1}\mathbf {\hat {b}} \,
Darn
 
Oh, a line break counts as a paragraph break and hence a good place to stop.
 
Ahh
 
I'd like to draw attention to the fact that it was Google that did that, not Loquitor.
 
1:04 AM
Oh :P
 
1:17 AM
I think I'm gonna head out now. Good night folks!
 
bye
 
hm, I should clean up my downloads folder, it has so much junk xD
 
Good night.
 
 
2 hours later…
3:24 AM
 
I'm making chicken croquettes for breakfast.
 
user6820627
3:42 AM
SO is offline now
 
user6820627
Not anymore. (10:46)
 
user6820627
So, SO is down for 5 minutes.
 
4:11 AM
I was asked to prove this in the exam I wrote yesterday.
I couldn't figure out how to.
Oh, an easier way to do this would be to use the erf(x).
erfi(x)
I hate mathematics
Why am I learning this
 
user6820627
@littlepootis Me too
 
5:35 AM
@littlepootis vaow
The Gaussian integral, also known as the Euler–Poisson integral is the integral of the Gaussian function e−x2 over the entire real line. It is named after the German mathematician and physicist Carl Friedrich Gauss. The integral is: ∫ − ∞ + ∞ e − x 2 d x = ...
 
 
5 hours later…
10:09 AM
@littlepootis
123
Q: Proving $\int_{0}^{\infty} \mathrm{e}^{-x^2} dx = \dfrac{\sqrt \pi}{2}$

JichaoHow to prove $$\int_{0}^{\infty} \mathrm{e}^{-x^2}\, dx = \frac{\sqrt \pi}{2}$$

 
 
6 hours later…
4:27 PM
@littlepootis how'd you recommend I get started with PHP?
 
SeemsGood
 
@Rishav Self harm is bad. Don't do it.
 
all these freelances websites only have php jobs..
 
Wes
@Rishav do python. everybody loves python
 
@Wes I already know some python
 
5:27 PM
@Rishav laravel* jobs
 
Ah
do I just go to the laravel website then
 
Yes
smirks
Also, Wes contributes to PHP.
 
Oh
GG
 
6:28 PM
o/
Instant 7 downvotes lol
-7
Q: Can someone explain the purpose of callbacks?

CrimcodeSo i get that it passes a function object, however i don't see a instance on when i need to do this. I have noticed that the code looks a ot cleaner but that can't be the only reason we use callbacks correct?

 
 
1 hour later…
7:50 PM
@AndrewLi And ... closed.
 
 
1 hour later…
9:01 PM
i was told to come here?
 
@TheGreatDuck I was just thinking they could help you better than me
 
 
3 hours later…
11:55 PM
3
Q: What are these asymptotics called when two functions are bounded by a fixed shift of the other?

Simply Beautiful ArtWhen studying large numbers and extremely fast growing functions, I've noticed that the normal big-O notations are not enough to reasonably compare things. Instead, I've been using this: $$f=\operatorname{bounded}(g)\iff\exists a<b\exists x_0\forall x>x_0(g(x+a)<f(x)<g(x+b))$$ That is, $f$ is ...

Hopefully you programmers know more on asymptotes and big-O stuff than I do. Stupidly simple question that no one knows the answer to :(
 
@TheGreatDuck Sorry, I've been busy for a while. Do you have a problem I can help you with?
 

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