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1:00 AM
6
Q: Big ideas that began small or small ideas that became big

HvjurthukI am looking for ideas that began as small and maybe naïve or weak in some obscure and not very known paper, school or book but at some point in history turned into big powerful tools in research opening new paths or suggesting new ways of thinking maybe somewhere else. I would like to find examp...

 
2:00 AM
8
Q: Australian Mathematical Society journal rankings

anonI apologize for a question that is not about mathematics, but I believe it is of interest to research mathematicians, and I believe there may be people on MathOverflow who can answer it objectively. If it is deemed unacceptable, I can survive. For many years, I (and many others I know) have used ...

 
 
4 hours later…
6:29 AM
6
Q: Why does division by 3 require a rightshift (and other oddities) on x86?

J. SchultkeI have the following C/C++ function: unsigned div3(unsigned x) { return x / 3; } When compiled using clang 10 at -O3, this results in: div3(unsigned int): mov ecx, edi # tmp = x mov eax, 2863311531 # result = 3^-1 imul rax, rcx # result *= ...

 
 
5 hours later…
11:47 AM
9
Q: Best texts on Lie groups for number theorists

user163784What are the most comprehensive textbooks on the structure of Lie groups and their infinite-dimensional representations if one is interested in their applications to number theory (so covering discrete subgroups and automorphic representations)?

 
12:35 PM
12
Q: Rotate a number

a1426Given a positive number n, rotate its digits m positions. That is, output the result of m steps of moving the last digit to the start. The rotation count m will be a non-negative integer. You should remove leading zeroes in the final result, but not in any of the intermediate steps. For example, ...

 
 
7 hours later…
7:05 PM
9
Q: How to Generate Sorted Uniformly Distributed Random Numbers Efficiently in C++?

epic-skyrise-tmI'd like to generate a large number n (i.e., n >= 1,000,000,000) of sorted and uniformly distributed random numbers in C++. A first and simple approach I considered was to sequentially generate n uniformly distributed numbers using an std::uniform_real_distribution<double>, and then sort them us...

 

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