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19:00
and Infinity*E can give us whatever number we want and we have specified in the beginning
this way we have no undecidability problems related to it from yesterday's problem
isn't that how surreal numbers work?
and we can actually define E as a function that returns a set:
E(n) = {n/Infinity, n}
and when we just get the number we return the first item, but in the special case when we multiply it by Infinity we get the second number
I don't think I've ever seen a number behave like this, but hey! It should work
what does "just get the number" mean?
and this also means that if a!=b, E(a) != E(b), which is exactly what we expect from calculus or other stuff
@KendallFrey use it in any calculation that doesn't involve multiplying by Infinity
a number having two values seems odd
19:04
I think this may also define a kind of maths where Infinity != Infinity + 1
@KendallFrey this is why E(n) is not considered a real number
complex numbers also have two values in some way, right?
I think you want to define Inf(x) = x * Inf(1) and E(x) = x / Inf(1)
where Inf(1) is a constant
@AlexBanman there is a line scroller: viewport.children(), in the options <-- it won't work since the viewport var isn't even defined. Delete it
@towc no
what would infinity*0 become?
@KendallFrey (3 + 2i)... we could say that we have as values 3 and 2, but it's still just one number
@karelg Alright, I'll try that thanks.
19:06
@towc they aren't separate values though
@KendallFrey the answer defines other kind of maths
@KendallFrey but are from 2 different axises, so you could consider them such
brb
@karelg IT WORKS. Thank you so much! Let me quickly try it on a few other devices and in a few other browsers.
@KendallFrey 1, duh
but then infinity * epsilon = 1 as well
therefore epsilon = 0?
@KendallFrey it depends of the approach
@KendallFrey not for my maths: it would be E[2] (starting to count from 1), and it depends on how E was defined in the first place
19:11
I've spent the past 4 hours trying to solve a phantom bug D:
My brain hurts
@towc huh?
wait, infinity * 0 would make more sense as 0
but then what would 1/0 be?
undefined
@karelg Works great on different devices and in the different browser windows.
0/0 = all values
@karelg For some reason the autoplay isn't working though.
19:14
@KendallFrey let's say I tried to do some integrals, and the x is 3, so we want to calculate the area under the curve of a function from x=0 to x=3... our epsilon is E(x), so E(3)
To anyone using React/Flux, you should call Object.freeze() on all of your data objects at their first entry point. To update the object, you just clone it and send the changes immediately to your data store. Then everything is happy and you get errors when you accidentally do it wrong
when doing regular calculus stuff you use the first value (3/Infinity)
so x/inf = x*eps
but then, when you multiply it by infinity you get the second value (E*Infinity === 3)
@karelg But great that it works anyway.
19:15
@AlexBanman yeah, check the options list. You will see somewhere autoplay: false , just replace the false with true
in mathematics, is 3/∞ === ∞?
@KendallFrey not if eps is a new kind of number
I cannot map a folder on my Ubuntu 14.04. I put try like this \\127.0.0.1\var. I know the VM shoudln't be running on localhost, but this is having right. Why is it not mapping it? It doesn't even crash, it just loads on forever.
@StevensHaen Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
@Shmiddty that's 0
19:16
1=ei is the only system that makes sense to me, but I can't make it consistent with 0
@KarelG Ah, right, of course
@Shmiddty no, it would be epsilon
epsilon or 0, and what's the difference?
that's what I'm trying to figure out
@KendallFrey ei?
19:17
epsilon*infinity
where epsilon is defined to be < x where x is positive
@KendallFrey if your epsilon is defined as E(1) then I would agree
exp(i * PI) = -1
@karelg Awesome, that worked too. Thank you very much for your help.
and infinity is defined to be > x for all x in the reals
@KarelG e^(i*PI) = -1
19:19
e^(x) = exp(x) ...
depends of preference
@KarelG i'm pretty sure exp is only used in computation
a beautiful formula, showing relation of the e, i and PI function
nah, you may use it when writing mathematical formulas
inb4 e^iTau = 1
good to know
you're welcome lemon
@towc So in this system, what would 1/0 be?
19:21
using exp(x) is handly if x = sin(y) + .... / cos(y) + .... / ....
You know how they project onto hokey rinks? Shouldn't it be possible to account for all of the lines and logos and such by putting a filter on the projection? That is, make the lines disappear so the picture is exactly what it should be instead of what it should be + lines.
@karelg I don't want to be a "help vampire" but I'm not sure I have the time to learn to code javascript and answer other peoples questions. Do you want me to send you $5 for your time?
@Shmiddty yes
@KendallFrey it wouldn't be? Maybe a new category of numbers called impossible numbers?
@KendallFrey I thought so. Must still be a pretty young technology
19:22
I mean, it can't really be Infinity
@towc so you're saying that 0 wouldn't be a part of this set of numbers?
!!> 3 / Infinity
@Shmiddty 0
It isn't actually zero, it's just "close enough"
@AlexBanman no, it's with pleasure. i just had some time ... The website seems smooth and decent though
19:22
unless we define inf as a function: inf(x) = {x/0, x}
and we return x if we multiply by 0
@towc we can't pick between number representations
@KendallFrey not in the current model of maths
just store the numerator and denominator separately
if we represent infinities as sets or pairs, we need to represent everything the same way
@towc You're proposing a whole new mathematics? That seems a stretch
in the current model of maths the difference is trascurable, but the meaning of a formula is the same
19:24
@karelg Thanks, I'm alright with CSS and HTML but Java and JQuery still elude me. I haven't made it over the steep learning curve yet, and it's still daunting, haha.
if we want to keep this trascurability I propose having some numbers to be sets, no more single valued numbers
@karelg But I think I have a bit better of an understanding of it after this. Thanks again.
@KendallFrey pairs of the same number :P
@towc some numbers but not all?
@KendallFrey Seems like a good idea to do that anyways. If you can represent an irrational number as a fraction, that's obviously better
19:25
@towc ok, but can you make that work without special cases?
@KendallFrey maybe just a category of them
remember, math is only useful when it's more elegant than the alternative
@KendallFrey depends if you consider i a special case
given an array of [a,b,c,d] how can I build an array of [a_b, a_c, a_d, b_a, b_c, b_d, etc...]
@user3271518 Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
19:26
@towc no, it's not
i*i is computed the exact same way as 2*3
then those numbers wouldn't be special cases
given the rules of complex arithmetic
@user3271518 what do the underscores represent?
@towc so demonstrate an arithmetic that works with those numbers
we could go as deep as we want into the iness (?) of numbers: 3 + 2i + 1j and so on
19:27
@shmiddty it represents a pairing
pairing how?
each of those levels has it's own epsilon and infinity
so we just created an infinite number of special cases, no longer making them special cases
like a grouping like ab, ac, ad, ba, bc, bd
in infinite number of special cases means your algebraic set is broken to shit
i just used the _ to do a better graphical represntation
19:28
so [a,b,c,d] -> [[a,b],[a,c],...]?
no I want to merge them like ab, ac, ad
@KendallFrey or that that's the reason they aren't special cases anymore because you can generalize them
that depends completely on their data type
@user3271518 you mean a+b, a+c, a+d...
@towc usually generalization is the whole point of math
19:29
and how you define "merge"
@KendallFrey exactly
so if you can generalize, good, if not, bad
and you can generalize this
@towc yes but its an array of strings
ya know that i read those ab, ac as a * b, a*c which wouldn't work on non-number types
Be clear in what you want
19:30
@towc show me, please. I'd love to see it
like give an example
@user3271518 so you want to concatenate all of the permutations of an array of strings
we set E(x) before. x can be an imaginary or even an iperimaginary (?) number, and that would define in which set of numbers E(x) should be
or just make a new set for infinitesimal numbers and infinite numbers
stick to the reals
@KarelG I have an array of stuff like ['QRK', 'RDD', 'POT' etc...] and I need to build an array that is ['QRK_RDD', 'QRK_POT' etc...] now my issue is 'QRK_RDD' != 'RDD_QRK'
19:33
@KendallFrey which wouldn't be an accurate rappresentation of the numbers
so say 0 < e < x for all positive x, right?
@user3271518 Of course they aren't the same
@towc for simplicity's sake, for now
@KendallFrey yeah
@KendallFrey simple doesn't always mean true
ok, so now we know part of the nature of epsilon
19:34
@Shmiddty so i guess yes concatenate all permutations of an array of strings that might be the proper term ty
how does arithmetic work?
@user3271518 if you're using js, you can use objects for it, and define an equal() function
a model of an object doesn't rapresent the object in it's true nature
@user3271518 and order matters?
@schmiddy yes
19:35
in maths all of the models should be completely accurate, if I understood correctly. But this already doesn't happen with 1/3 === 0.(3)
!!tell user3271518 google permutation algorithm
@towc if you insist, use complex. but define the arithmetic involving this number
@CapricaSix @Shmiddty thank you! sorry....sometimes just knowing what my problem is called is the best answer!
@KendallFrey I guess I know what my first paper could be about when I get to university
19:36
@towc 0.333... is identical to 1/3, just as 0.999... is identical to 1
@KendallFrey we talked about it yesterday
@user3271518 no worries, and I totally agree :)
@towc we did?
and we found out that we just disagree
about whether 0.999... = 1?
19:37
@KendallFrey well, with a few of the regulars, not sure if you were one of them
that is plainly provable, I don't know how you can disagree
my point was that 0.(9) = 1 - E
and that the part that I thought was wrong in the logics is that actually 1/3 != 0.(3), but 0.(3) + E
can you find fault with any of the proofs?
19:38
what is that for notation: 0.(9) ?
heated math debates always make me horny
and i hope that E = the 10^1 sign >.>
@KendallFrey that right there should disprove all of the ones I know or that I can recall in this moment
@Shmiddty prove it
@KarelG 0.9999999 infinitely
19:38
@KarelG 0.99999999999999999999999999999999999999999
ah, well, i'm with Kendall
@towc what should disprove them?
@Shmiddty *math debates
@KendallFrey 1/3 != 0.(3)
I for one love math debating
bananas
19:39
@towc stating that a proof is false is not disproving it
@towc how do you figure that?
@Shmiddty the pun goes away if you say maths
fixed!
@ssube take 0.(3) on it's own: how can you be sure that it actually is 1/3 and not just 0.(3)?
@towc because 0.333... * 3 = 0.999... = 1
19:40
@Shmiddty and cheese
My VM is running under 127.0.0.1. So when I try to to map a an _existing_folder in "Networks", it crashes and complains about the folder not existing.
@KendallFrey exactly
cheese + bananas is not a thing I've ever had
@KendallFrey but 0.(9) isn't 1... so we're just hiding under 2 different kinds of maths here
@StevensHaen it's almost certainly not 127.0.0.1
@towc what is the difference (mathematically) between 0.(9) and 1?
19:41
ifconfig says so
@towc but it is, unless you can find error with the many proofs of it
@towc the 0.999... is an approach of 1
one where the models are consistent, and the other in which they're good enough
@ssube E
@StevensHaen 127 is a loopback
@ssube pinging it works as well
19:41
@towc how do you figure that?
@StevensHaen every box has a 127.0.0.1 address, which refers to itself
@ssube Chagning the /etc/interface file with a new ip didn't work. Should I try this again?
@towc are you talking about this E?
According to numerical analysis, 0.999... is an approach of 1, which means 0.999... = 1 +- epsilon
@KarelG 0.(9), repeated infinitely, is infinitely close to 1
@ssube let's say 1 is for sure the real value after 0.(9). Subtract 0.(9) to both and what you get is that 0 = the next real value after 0, which is E
19:43
there is no measurable difference
thus, they are equal
@ssube I'm referring to epsilon, the infinitesimal value
according to calculus, an infinite series is equal to its limit
yes, but, for convenient maths, 0.(9) = 1
it depends of approach of maths
@towc but you haven't proven that 1 > 0.999...
kendall and towc is approaching it differently
19:44
@KarelG = a math where the models are good enough, but still incorrect
@towc incorrect is never good enough
@KarelG this is a proven thing, it's not much about approaches
^
the best approach for you to take right now is demonstrate the existing proofs are wrong
has anyone cited the proofs yet?
@KendallFrey good enough for humans? We've never really encountered a problem with that model until we've looked at the meaning of the expressions
19:45
@towc There are the proofs. How are they incorrect?
@ssube at first glance I look at the ones using infinite series, which are just modelizing the result, not actually expressing one
@towc isn't that what proofs do?
meh, the numbers that we know are imaginary. So the "1" is imaginary.
/ back to fiddle with codes
@ssube proofs proove, but if their modelization is wrong they're not proofs in the kind of the mathematics where the meaning of the modelization is considered
we're still on this?
19:48
hi
How many arguments about .(9) could you fit on infinite ping-pong balls?
seems pretty convincing
@SomeKittens no, but we managed to get back to it
@ssube from what I recall that final formula is just a model
that works well if the leftover epsilons are transcured
@towc If you state that 0.999... /= 1 then you must also state which form of mathematics you're using, because it's certainly not the standard, widely accepted form.
@KendallFrey I could actually define the mathematics I'm using just by saying that 1/3 /= 0.333...
but I'm having a hard time trying to explain it
19:50
@KendallFrey that's called numerical analysis
I may be wrong, but my thoughts still make complete sense to me
@towc but then you have to redefine most of the standard framework of math
@KendallFrey exactly
@towc wait, what's wrong with the current one?
@ssube the models are not precise
19:53
sure they are
at least, from my point of view
they work
that's the most important part of math
if you can come up with an alternate, working, useful system, many kudos
@KendallFrey they kind of work... we can't really tell the difference between 1/3 and 0.333 by measuring in the real world
math is not based on measurements
that's physics
19:54
math is based on pure unadulterated theory
Measurements are based on math :P
@KendallFrey maybe we can't see an useful application for it now, but maybe we may open the bridges to new areas of useful mathematics
@AwalGarg I SUMMON U IMMEDIATELY
@KendallFrey In this particular case, dozenal.
0.333... => 0.4
Beautiful.
19:55
@KendallFrey so we have no real world proof that 1/3 is 0.333 or that it isn't, we have to work it out with a precise model
Followed by:
@SomeGuy you around ?
@ircmaxell yeah, I watched it
did you watch the second one?
19:55
and that too
@ircmaxell Watched both. Both are great.
user1596138
> Commonly used by women to keep their partner from straying, Salt Petre is also of great use in exorcisms and other purification rituals.
user1596138
we're just defining 2 different kinds of maths: one is practical, the other is correct
user1596138
19:56
Wtf amazon
user1596138
Oh there's people actually talking about something here
@ircmaxell : you simply googled that right ?
@towc What
@towc the current system of math is correct, unless you can find a flaw in it. It's also practical, or it would not have been developed
@KarelG not really, I did search for that specific video, but I was specifically looking for Vi Hart's videos
19:57
@Jhawins can't cheat if you shoot 'em. It's a classic.
@towc I'd suggest you read GEB
If this is the .999... !== 1 thing again
@KendallFrey flaw #1: 0.999... /= 1
@Zirak sort of. well, yes
@towc THAT'S NOT A FUCKING FLAW UNLESS YOU PROVE IT
user1596138
19:58
@ssube but thats the product description of the chemical lol
@towc There are proofs for that, so you gotta come up with a proof against it.
@KendallFrey ok: I think I can prove to you that 1/3 /= 0.333
so: standard division:
@towc i'd love to see it
flaw #1 in our current theory of weather: the sky /= sheep
1/3: write a 0, and divide 10 by 3
you get 3 and you carry a 1
19:59
but really, the sky is made of sheep, it's just not practical to think so, or else all them sheeps would fall on us :P
and so on for ever and ever
@ircmaxell To be fair, it's an april fools' video
Fact #1: Your wrist is hurting
@towc 1/3 is != 0.333. It's equal to 0.333 bar, meaning where the 3's go on forever
Fact #2: You are dead
19:59
where did that last 1 go?
There is no last 1

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