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20:00
@towc what is the measurable difference between 1/3 and 0.(3)?
how far apart are they?
there is no last 3, so there can't be a last 1 after the last 3
it's 1/Infinity, which is Epsilon, and it is the remainder of the division
@towc What last 1? saying there is a last one is akin to saying the series stopped, which it didn't
you can't divide by infinity, it's not a number
@ssube by epsilon
20:00
@towc 1/infinity is undefined
@towc no, they are infinitely close together. There is no measurable difference.
@towc Infinity is in calculus, we're still in algebra if I get your direction
you can't measure the difference, because you can never get to the end of 0.(3)
@ircmaxell that's the definition of Epsilon(1) in my mathematics
there is no final division, as @ircmaxell said, so there is no epsilon or "last 1"
20:01
@towc well, ok, let's go with that
@ssube in my maths it is
@ssube this is why the model is practical but wrong
@towc You still haven't presented us with a working model
let's say you define epsilon(1) as 1/infinity. What else do you have to change about the algebra
@towc it is correct within itself, it's not wrong
does anyone have a cannon ?
20:02
dividing Infinity times is like saying that the series never stopped
so we get back to what we had before: 1/3 = 0.333... + E(1)
@towc Your proof has a flaw: It used the word "final"
Name the leaping lords
4 is Voldemort, I think
@towc prove that there is a measurable difference between 1/3 and 0.(3), and I'll buy it.
20:03
8 is Cthulhu
3th = sauron
before the pig, darth vader
It's not even in measurableness, it's in the necessity of notation and its flaws
I think the pig is the pig from animal farm
@Zirak you can just remove it, the statement still works
20:04
@Shmiddty had to laugh at that :| idk why
@ssube the difference is infinitesimal. It can't be measured, but it exist
@towc prove that it exists
"infinitesimal" that term is used in numerical analysis.
We have a model in our head of what 0.3 til infinity is, we have in our heads what a limit is, but we need to communicate it to others. That's where notation comes along, and we still haven't found a way to express ourselves perfectly and without error.
@KendallFrey do you not agree with the "1 that keeps getting carried" proof?
20:05
@towc is it infinitesimal, or does it just not exist?
prove that there is a difference
@towc so that means one of the following 3 things in your math system: 1) infinity is finite 2) E(1) is not finite or 3) your system is incomplete
@Zirak 1/3 remains 1/3
@towc Yes, it keeps getting carries and it never stops
@KarelG More pigs than I remember. Hah
@towc that 1 keeps getting carried forever.
20:06
If #1, then you have massive problems. If #2, non-finite values don't obey addition rules as you expect. If #3, then well, point proven
@ircmaxell why is it incomplete?
Consider the hotel example of infinity: if you have a hotel with infinite rooms, and each has a guest in it, you can move each guest down by 1 room and have an empty room for another guest.
@ssube but it must still get considered
If you've divided 1/3 and have 1 left, you can divide it by 3 again, and again, and again, infinitely.
user1596138
!!> 1 % 0.333
20:06
and the precise way to consider it is E
@Jhawins 0.0009999999999999454
user1596138
Huzzah! Nothing
@towc because there's a logical inconsistency. You're saying that there's an infinite number of 3's. But you add a finite number to that E(0), which means that there's a contradiction
There is no E at the end, it never ends.
@towc we don't need to consider what happens when it stops, if it never stops
20:07
@towc ffs just get a math degree
:D
There cannot be a finite epsilon at the end of an infinite series of division.
Because, by definition, the division never ends.
@ssube epsilon isn't finite
!!youtube we'll you're a nerd asdf
20:07
@ssube sure there is
@SomeKittens :D
Epsilon is finite, it's just a letter that represents a number
@CapricaSix don't get computation into this
@BenjaminGruenbaum a non-rational, non-normal, non-irrational number
user1596138
20:08
@towc lol try to make a proof based on that response from caprica
@KendallFrey we don't need it to stop
Also, let's say there is an epsilon there, then by the very nature of epsilon it's irrelephant, otherwise I'm very confused about basic derivatives (well, even more confused)
HAMMERTIME!
user1596138
You will find it just as easily
@towc you need it to stop if there's going to be a remainder
20:08
@BenjaminGruenbaum if can be infinite too if, you say epsilon = infinite ;)
@ssube the same goes for epsilon: it's infinitesimal
@ircmaxell What's non rational about it? You can take epsilon to be rational every time you pick rationals since the rationals are dense in the real numbers so the non-rational isn't really an issue. As for non-normal not really sure what can be normal abut a number.
@towc prove that it exists at all
@KarelG now that's just bullshit :D Unless you formally define what it means
@Jhawins try to make a proof of 0.1 + 0.2 = 0.3 from caprica's response
20:09
What the heck are you people talking about?
you can't claim there is a 1 left over after dividing infinitely, because you'll never get there
@BenjaminGruenbaum no, meaning it's not a REAL number. It doesn't lie on the number line.
@BenjaminGruenbaum @towc thinks 0.9999 (repeating) != 1.0, most (all?) of us don't have math degrees, it's fun :D
@BenjaminGruenbaum I am a banaaana
20:10
@ssube then you can also say that all of the infinite series are wrong
@Zirak prove it
@ircmaxell of course it's a number when you say "For every epsilon there exists a delta" every time you pick an epsilon it's a concrete number.
@ssube i3.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/newsfeed/000/427/559/0ef.jpg wait, what did I want to prove again?
Of course the letter epsilon isn't a number - it's a letter, it's just syntax, when you give it semantics it usually means a number.
@towc no. If some series becomes infinitely close to some constant value, what is the difference between them?
20:11
@ssube does engineering count as math degree ?
@BenjaminGruenbaum not in the way he's claiming (he's saying that 1/3 = 0.333... + E(1))
@KarelG hell if I know, I don't have a degree in degrees.
2
I don't even have a degree, period.
Only ever attended college on nights and weekends, when there was beer.
The weather have degrees though ... sometimes it's even negative
20:11
@ircmaxell oh, in that case it's an infinitesimal - but no one does calculus like that, it's pretty silly to work with that axiom system.
@BenjaminGruenbaum and an infinitesimal is not a real number
@BenjaminGruenbaum you clearly don't have a degree in fun
@towc Think about this: if you add any positive number to 0.333..., at some point you will reach a digit that is > 3, which would instantly make it > 1/3
@ssube grumpycat.jpeg
I was suggesting epsilon to change based on your needs: for example let y = Epsilon(x){y=x/Infinity, y=x};
you use y[1] when you do anything that does not involve multiplying y by Infinity, you use the other in the other case
20:12
so therefore 0.333... cannot be less than 1/3
@ssube practically none, technically some
@ircmaxell not in the normal construction - no.
@towc right, now formalize it: you can't divide by infinity. What you actually do formally is you say that "For every epsilon you pick there exists an n such that 0.3333.. (n 3s)" is closer to 1/3 than epsilon.
which gets to the point: either E(1) is not finite, or infinity is fininte, or E(1) is 0. No other option can happen without introducing an inconsistency
@KendallFrey unless it's Epsilon
and in my model you can divide by Infinity
@towc but if 0.333... + E = 0.333... then E = 0 necessarily
20:15
@KendallFrey wut?
@ircmaxell actually, you can do that consistently - it's just a different construction. You can develop numbers using infinitesimals - people don't see it usually, it's taught as an exercise in "logics 2" courses.
@BenjaminGruenbaum the result won't be a real number
@towc your model is not well defined - you need to construct it and prove it.
@towc you claim that adding E to an infinite string of 3's results in an infinite string of 3's, right?
@KendallFrey not really
20:16
yes, you can create algebras with all sorts of weird behaviors. But you can't do something like real = real + non-real in any of them.
Oh, maybe I should point out that ...999 = -1 :D
@towc what is it then?
you should end up with 0.333...334, and that is if you stopped, if you didn't stop you get 0.333 + E(1)
@ircmaxell the result can be a real number - it's a different construction, it's well defined - you can prove that the real numbers by the regular definition are the same (that is, there exists an isomorphism between the regular construction and this one, and that that they're the same cardinality so they are elementarily biconditional"
@towc It concerns me that you have numbers after the triple dot
(also, what's E(1)?)
@towc Wait, so 0.333... + E = 0.333...334?
20:17
@Zirak Epsilon(1)
@ircmaxell sure you can :D
but then 0.333... + E > 1/3, which is what you originally stated
@BenjaminGruenbaum not with the normal definition of real you can't
@KendallFrey but 0.333...334 is not a correct rappresentation
you can change the axiom of how you define real.
20:18
@towc well, mr. picky, better use one then
@KendallFrey why do you say that you get a bigger number?
@towc What does that mean?
@towc because 0.333..34 > 1/3 obviously
After all, when you do 1+0i (the complex) number it's not really a real number, but you can show that the reals are the same as the complex numbers with 0i as the imaginary part.
@ircmaxell right, that's correct.
@towc Is it the same number? Is it smaller?
20:18
6 mins ago, by towc
I was suggesting epsilon to change based on your needs: for example let y = Epsilon(x){y=x/Infinity, y=x};
you use y[1] when you do anything that does not involve multiplying y by Infinity, you use the other in the other case
@BenjaminGruenbaum that's not the discussion that we're having here though
oh, okay
@KendallFrey why obviously?
@Zirak howdy
@ircmaxell you stay with the same numbers up to a name change - that is, there is no formula that distinguishes them.
20:19
Wait what
@Zirak it should be the same number
@rlemon Ahoy there cowboy
@ircmaxell it actually is- @towc is just doing a different construction. He's sloppy and incorrect but his idea is actually valid.
@Zirak ever use putty on the command line?
@towc And when two numbers are the same...
20:19
yay! someone kind of agrees
@towc when you claim things mathematically - you need to define them well and prove any derivations you make - otherwise people call you a crank.
@towc because 1/3 results in 0.333..., and we know that if any digit in x is larger than the same digit in y, all preceding digits being equal, then x > y
@rlemon I guess it's just like ssh, so in a way, yes.
In mathematics, non-standard calculus is the modern application of infinitesimals, in the sense of non-standard analysis, to differential and integral calculus. It provides a rigorous justification for some arguments in calculus that were previously considered merely heuristic. Calculations with infinitesimals were widely used before Karl Weierstrass sought to replace them with the (ε, δ)-definition of limit starting in the 1870s. (See history of calculus.) For almost one hundred years thereafter, mathematicians like Richard Courant viewed infinitesimals as being naive and vague or meaningless...
^ @towc go read
@towc so, you're saying x/Infinity is E(x), and 0.33... + E(1) = ? 1/3, or 0.33...34?
20:20
@Zirak putty supports much more than just ssh
@BenjaminGruenbaum
27 secs ago, by Benjamin Gruenbaum
In mathematics, non-standard calculus is the modern application of infinitesimals, in the sense of non-standard analysis, to differential and integral calculus. It provides a rigorous justification for some arguments in calculus that were previously considered merely heuristic. Calculations with infinitesimals were widely used before Karl Weierstrass sought to replace them with the (ε, δ)-definition of limit starting in the 1870s. (See history of calculus.) For almost one hundred years thereafter, mathematicians like Richard Courant viewed infinitesimals as being naive and vague or meaningless...
I'm trying to use putty to connect to a serial device but am getting "(putty:3178): Gtk-WARNING **: cannot open display: "
trying to solve it
@KendallFrey that's why ...334 is a wrong rapresentation
stress relief lotion is shockingly affective
20:21
MSc Math courses to save the day :D
if the latter, then 0.33...34 - E(1) = 0.33..., thus E(1) = 0.00...01. If E(1) = 1/Infinity, then 0.00...01 * Infinity must = 1.
@ssube 1/3
@rlemon What're you running?
whatever the smell is, it's aromatherapeutic
@Zirak the command or the OSs?
20:21
@rlemon Command
putty -serial /dev/ttyO4
@ssube which is exactly what my definition of E is
Yeah I got nothing
haven't found the docs explaining where I put in my baud, but I'll cross that bridge when I get to it
let me read what ben sent me
20:22
@towc what, then, is 0.33... + 2 * E(1)?
@towc you on the other hand need to get a formal construction - go read math.wisc.edu/~keisler/calc.html
This is an actual book that uses your definition of infinitesimals rather than the regular formal epsilon/delta construction.
It's less intuitive, but has interesting applications
@ssube 0.33... + E(2), and it's first value is the same as E(1)
@towc also - lol :D
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm glad I'm not completely wrong. I used really similar examples
but I'm also quite sad I wasn't the first to notice it
Heh, enjoy the reading
20:32
@rlemon : for serial connection, you have to set a baudrate. Not sure if you can set it through terminal though
does anyone have any advice on ways i can let the customer update a csv over the web and have that data update the model in a view?
unfortunately can not connect to a db or anything server side
So you want to change something on the server, without changing something on the server?
on a completely unrelated note: why is this undefined for negative values for x?
@Zirak essentially. i can convert csv to json using a converter tool, but i have to do that manually
could there be a way to automate it
@redshift Re-read what I posted and see why that doesn't make sense
20:36
(the +0 is just so that google could interpret it as a graph instruction)
@KarelG yea but that isn't the issue.
if the baud is bad I just get garbage
@darkyen00 here
@Zirak then yes i do but don't have the db access, so any othe rways to do it
right now I'm not even getting a connection
could be a dumb question, but does your system find it ?
20:39
huh?
@towc it's not, it's complex
@rlemon you're a sadist, aren't you
@KendallFrey that just applies for some numbers
@towc define ^
x = -1 you should obtain -1, right?
20:41
yes, you do
x = -2: y = -1/4
@taco some days I wonder
i mean, does your linux recognize the adapter
and so all of the integers work...
user1596138
@rlemon did you figure it out
20:42
@KarelG no adapter son. old school. I have two pc's linked via a serial connection
@towc but the nonintegers have imaginary components
it forms a spiral in the complex plane
@Jhawins yea, got putty installed.
well, x = 1.5 no longer works...
(I remember this one)
not working yet, but putty is installed
20:43
@rlemon I think he's saying did you try another serial program
is that an experiment ?
@towc sure it works, just not with reals
@taco yes
yeah
well, rather, I can use putty gui on windows and it works
20:43
@towc you did not define ^
putty from the command line on linux is bitching about not being able to open the display
@BenjaminGruenbaum x^y = x to the power of y
@BenjaminGruenbaum exponentiation
@towc that's not a definition
@KendallFrey that's not a definition either
@BenjaminGruenbaum what do you mean?
20:44
oh you mean in terms of math
user1596138
!!define definition
@Jhawins definition (semantics) A statement of the meaning of a word or word group or a sign or symbol (dictionary definitions).
also @KarelG @taco GNU screen works, but drops a lot of data :(
@towc define it based on existing operations.
Let's say I'm giving you + / * and - for free because I'm nice, but only for rational numbers.
20:45
I don't know how exponentiation works for complex numbers, but that's something I wish I knew
@BenjaminGruenbaum multiplication of "x"s for "y" times?
@AwalGarg do u have an android phone and android tools installed ?
where y is an integer...
@towc fails for rationals
@darkyen00 Not yet. I will gift myself this year though.
20:45
I'm trying to learn sinon.js. I'm not doing very well >:|
@towc what does "y times" even mean when y is not a nonzero positive integer?
And what's multiplication of numbers that are not rational anyway?
screen connects at 9600 baud if you didn't have set it
I don't know anymore
you have to find the right baudrate for a good connection
@KarelG yea baud is not my issue :P
I mentioned that already
20:46
@towc start there :D
you said that it drops a lot data ... that means baud isn't good
no, baud being bad would result in garbage data.
@darkyen00 Why what happened? Also, what are we doing about wallet?
screen drops data with correct baud
screen /dev/ttyO4 57600
sets my baud right.
@AwalGarg well it was related to wallet
day after tomorrow i demo it to the world
20:47
still miss bytes from the beginning and end of frames
and its offically called batuapay.
@towc start easier, with what a real number actually is
I was doing a small test, and something went wrong.
> me.add({name: "Blah"});
{}
> me.has({name: "Blah"});
false
@darkyen00 I missed some github commits, it seems :P
20:48
@GabrielTomitsuka what is .add
@rlemon if you can control the baud rate, the slower the better. Less chance for dropped data. I think routers use something much slower than that
you misssed a lot more @AwalGarg
ECMAScript 6 Sets
20:49
404
try 9600 baud rate @rlemon
@darkyen00 Nothing...
I really don't wanna run this at 9600 baud
did you do your calcs well to get 57600 ?
20:49
@GabrielTomitsuka / ANY NON INDIAN IT WONT WORK FOR U
I have before, it is very slow.
Fixed the heisenbug!!!!
ok
@KarelG I control both ends of the equation here. I set the QNX system to be 57600
@darkyen00 It's blocked in Germany? :(
xD
20:50
I'm not new to serial. just never had to connect a terminal between the two.
usually deal with modbus and serial
well, i don't know the whole circumstances.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I can't believe that I need to google it
btw @towc don't take any disagreement as disencouragement. It's awesome that you're thinking about these things.
@darkyen00 load google fonts over https dude :P
@towc They don't teach you that in high school :) It's university grade mathematics
20:51
@Zirak I learnt that there is no use in accounting for what the internet says already XD
@AwalGarg mhm
and thanks
@GabrielTomitsuka no ... my server has identifier hard coded to append
+91 in front of your phone number
@BenjaminGruenbaum I would be thinking of all of the numbers that lay in the line of real numbers
anyways in order to pay using the engine i built
you will need to have a credit card / bank account
20:52
That's not a formal definition at all ;)
oh wait a minute !
Download and read spivak
IT WILL INDEED WORK !!
> I forgot my own product
that is the line where, in a pandimensional plane, all of the values for the coordinates are 0 except for the x, which can hold any value
QNX4 system stripped to the tits with a db9 serial connection to a beagle bone running Angstrom Linux. I need a proper terminal between them... but QNX4 doesn't seem to be using VT100 or VT102... so not everything works out of the box with terminal emulators I've tried. using putty now because it is next on the list of things to see if this might work. it is far from being optimal, but I'm locked into a bad spot. the QNX system is being re-written but we need a bandaid solution in the meantime.
so, yea. I'm basically pouring salt into my own wounds.
20:53
@rlemon you said you're using Archlinux, right?
@BenjaminGruenbaum exactly
@taco no
Angstrom Distribution
(sorry @towc, misping)
np
20:54
well. 4:55 so I'm about done trying to solve this for the day
@BenjaminGruenbaum too many spivaks in this world... to what are you referencing?
@AwalGarg the only update is i removed p2p payments
let it rest for a while, maybe you will get an awesome idea soon.
now they are p->server->p
i got once an eureka on a difficult problem when i was in the WC pooping
20:55
maybe try this: stty -F /dev/ttyUSB0 -ixon (don't know what it does, but I found it here bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=125606) stty -a /dev/ttyUSB0 should show if flow control is on
lol
> I don't know what it does.. but try it!
it sounds like maybe some distro's setup the tty's differently
@darkyen00 The demo looks good
by tomorrow evening you should be able to download an app at
@BenjaminGruenbaum trying really hard not to look it up: a real number is a number rapresenting a quantity?
20:56
@towc "calculus"
@towc that's again not well defined.
@towc formalization brings a whole new level of understanding, trust me - you want to formally construct the numbers.
You don't really understand numbers until you do Calculus 1
@rlemon I worked support from 96 to 2007. I fixed probably 97% of issues that people called me about. You don't have to be a subject matter expert to fix something :)
@taco used google as assistant ?
@taco you don't need to be a chef to spot a burnt burger
@ssube well...
Some people can burn water.
real numbers are all of the numbers that divided by epsilon return an integer
20:59
@ssube bad analogy. You can't unruin a horribly cooked meal
but since I defined epsilon in terms of real numbers I guess this doesn't work either
@towc stop that and read the damn book :D
@KarelG who doesn't use Google
@SterlingArcher a) it's a metaphor or analogy or something like that saying that you don't need to be an expert if things are bad enough, and b) I don't think you can burn water, like physics-wise
fuck physics brah!
20:59
ok...

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