Artois said:Interesting article on Wikipedia today:
Instead of working on defining what does or does not equal 1, perhaps you could explain for me your definition of 'interesting'.
Artois said:Interesting article on Wikipedia today:
Seagull Stew said:I always though that if you divide anything by 0 you get infinity!
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readingstockport said:Not bonkers at all, simply incorrect and flawed maths. Either deliberatley or accidentally.
The numbers .9999999999..... and .33333333333..... are infinite sequences. Therefore the equation
c = 0.999…
10c = 9.999…
10c − c = 9.999… − 0.999…
is invalid at the following.
9c = 9
The correct answer to the above is
9c = 9.0000000000000................... to infinity where the last number in the sequence (which there isn't because itis infinite) is 1.
Hence c = 1 is an invalid and flawed conclusion. You can legitimately write C is approximately= 1 but the exact is not correct.
fork me said:Yes, another proof is 0.33..... = 1/3
1/3 x 3 = 1
0.33..... x 3 = 0.99.....
Therefore 0.99.... = 1
fork me said:I think you'll find you're wrong.
It's certainly what I was taught at University all those years ago.
I know it's not always the most reliable source in the World, but
here's Wikipedia's take on it. This article cites very reliable references.
Fork Me
Tom Hark said:We had a number called 'the square root of minus one' when I was at school. Think I lost all interest in maths round about then...
Tom Hark said:We had a number called 'the square root of minus one' when I was at school. Think I lost all interest in maths round about then...
Tubthumper said:Why is he wrong? I've got a degree in maths and I'll tell you that 0.9999999 recurring isnt equal to one (although this is so elementary you only need a bit of schooling to appreciate 0.999 ne 1). The limit tends to one infinately but nothing else.
DTES said:Yep. (-1)^0.5 = i
Sounds crazy, but space flight wouldn't be possible without it. Engineering (and quantum physics for that matter) depends on it's existence to solve a lot of their respective equations...
DTES said:Yep. (-1)^0.5 = i
Sounds crazy, but space flight wouldn't be possible without it.
Tom Hark said:Would that be imaginary space flight by any chance?
DTES said:Right, if anyone out there is still somehow not convinced of the fact that they are equal, here is another proof, even more watertight:
1. You can write 0.99999999r = 0.9 + 0.09 + 0.009 + 0.0009....
Then using standard geometric summation (which unfortunately I can't use proper notation for in this, but imagine the symbols idf you will...)
Using a = 0.9, r = 0.1 we have
Sn = a + ar + ar^2 + ar^3 + .....
= a / (1-r)
=0.9 / (1-0.1)
=1
(Call me a geek all you want, but you can't say I'm wrong...)
Buzzer said:what he said.
except I've only got a degree in theoretical nuclear physics, so the maths wasn't quite so hard and we could make assumptions such as 0.9999 recurring = 1.
We could also make assumptions such as 'assume g=0' which used to piss off the engineers but that's another story.
Tubthumper said:For practical and applied reasons I am sure you can assume it is 1 in certain circumstances....but technically it is not.