Artemus
Veteran Member
You are introducing limits (from left field) to make use of the expression, not proving it has a final value.
Thus demonstrating again that you don't understand what 0.999... means.
You are introducing limits (from left field) to make use of the expression, not proving it has a final value.
You are introducing limits (from left field) to make use of the expression, not proving it has a final value.
Thus demonstrating again that you don't understand what 0.999... means.
You are introducing limits (from left field) to make use of the expression, not proving it has a final value.
Thus demonstrating again that you don't understand what 0.999... means.
You don't know.
I am not arguing an equivalence where an infinite string by magic ends.
You are introducing limits (from left field) to make use of the expression, not proving it has a final value.
You are rounding off by definition when the difference is insignificant, not proving the 9's end.
You are not arguing anything. You're crying foul whenever something doesn't fit your preconceived conclusions, or whenever reality becomes too complex for you too understand (presumably mostly, because you aren't even trying; you probably could be a smart boy if you wanted).
coincidence
How so? A Reimann integration is a limut as dx goes to zero. It is an approximation.
No it isn't. It is an exact operation. Please cite any mathematical text or peer reviewed article that says it is an approximation.
That wont do. The answer must be a real number. If you cant come up with a real value then the error is EQUAL to 0. That is the definition of equal for reals.
You are not listening, an approximate real number.
Likewise limit x -> inf 1/[2 + 1/x] approaches 2 but never gets there. We take it as 2 in a calculation.
Infinite limits are a tool for analysis, but are nor real.
”Real number” means a point in a the continuum. A element if R, the set of Reals. Not a number for an actual measurement, those will by obvious reasons have finite accuracy.
But I leave you in the same sad abyss of ignirabce as your friend here, untermensche. You have too much arrogance to able to discuss the matter reasonably.. Bye.
Sorry for disturbing you again but must ask you about this. What does it mean?A limit that is never reached.
In an infinite limit that converges on a finite vale the error is infinitesimally small. Infinity can never be reached.
y = 1/(2 + 1/x) x can never go to zinfinity in reality, 1/x can never go to zero.. Computationally in practice 0.5 would be taken as exact.
1/x is 0 from certain points of view. If you divide a line into an infinite amount of pieces, each piece is a point. It shifts dimensions from 1d to 0d. You can do it with volumes of spacetime as well (shifting down a dimension by dividing infinitely).
The fact that it can be done mentally means that it is done by nature.... but that's a rabbithole of an argument if I've ever seen one. And I haven't. I've read and herd them.
Sorry for disturbing you again but must ask you about this. What does it mean?A limit that is never reached.
It is true that it isnt reached for any finite number of terms of the seires. But that is not a problem because the value we are after isnt for a finite number of terms. The value we want to calculate is the limit. Not one of the approximations by a using a finite number of terms. Thus the limit is the ACTUAL EXACT value. Not an approximation.
We are not actually summing all these terms, we are calculating the limit.
Did thus help you?
You dont realize how funny that post is...Sorry for disturbing you again but must ask you about this. What does it mean?A limit that is never reached.
It is true that it isnt reached for any finite number of terms of the seires. But that is not a problem because the value we are after isnt for a finite number of terms. The value we want to calculate is the limit. Not one of the approximations by a using a finite number of terms. Thus the limit is the ACTUAL EXACT value. Not an approximation.
We are not actually summing all these terms, we are calculating the limit.
Did thus help you?
Juma
In the workplace I had a policy of never stealing someone's thunder unless it was necessary. Not my style to cut somebody down for no reason.
From all your posts I can only conclude you did not have the usual undergrad math or never learned any of it or applied any of it or it was a technology program not as rigorous as science and engineering.
I suggest getting your calc book and working some problems.
I stayed why I reject the conclusion.After this I will just be reating myself.
I have applied limits and series in real world problems. I'll go with my experience and analysis of the conclusion.
0.555.. . is a definition, an unchanging infinite number of 5s.
Converting to a geometric series and applying finite arithmetic is not the definition.
Infinite and finite are mutually exclusive. 0.999... can never equal a finite 1. )0333.. results in 1/3 with no incremting to a higher values, 1.3 = 0.333...
The method applied to 0.999.. yields the fraction 1/1 as an approximation. The fact that 0.999.. gets a rollover to 1 and 0.333... does not round up means that 0.999.. = 1/1 is not a proof that it is a finite 1. As stated in the link geometric series applied to decimals yields a fractional approximation.
0.999... = 1, 1 does not yield 0.999... and 0.333... = 1/3 = 0.333... An unresolved discrepancy. Conclusion the algorithm does not serve as a proof, it serves to provide fractional approximations.
If you disagree you have to explain the discrepancy between the results for 0.333... and 0.999... Is there a difference between the two other than the fact that for 0.999.. the algorithm can only yield 1/1, an artifact of the equation not a proof.
If you want to continue the debate, answer the above. I do not question the generation of a/1-r by a series, I question the conclusion of a proof. and interpretation of results. You are reading more into the method than it is intended to supply.
The series is by definition an approximation to 0.999... No different than a series approximation to trig functions,
I stayed why I reject the conclusion.After this I will just be reating myself.
I have applied limits and series in real world problems. I'll go with my experience and analysis of the conclusion.
0.555.. . is a definition, an unchanging infinite number of 5s.
Converting to a geometric series and applying finite arithmetic is not the definition.
Infinite and finite are mutually exclusive. 0.999... can never equal a finite 1. )0333.. results in 1/3 with no incremting to a higher values, 1.3 = 0.333...
The method applied to 0.999.. yields the fraction 1/1 as an approximation. The fact that 0.999.. gets a rollover to 1 and 0.333... does not round up means that 0.999.. = 1/1 is not a proof that it is a finite 1. As stated in the link geometric series applied to decimals yields a fractional approximation.
0.999... = 1, 1 does not yield 0.999... and 0.333... = 1/3 = 0.333... An unresolved discrepancy. Conclusion the algorithm does not serve as a proof, it serves to provide fractional approximations.
I stayed why I reject the conclusion.After this I will just be reating myself.
I have applied limits and series in real world problems. I'll go with my experience and analysis of the conclusion.
0.555.. . is a definition, an unchanging infinite number of 5s.
Converting to a geometric series and applying finite arithmetic is not the definition.
Infinite and finite are mutually exclusive. 0.999... can never equal a finite 1. )0333.. results in 1/3 with no incremting to a higher values, 1.3 = 0.333...
The method applied to 0.999.. yields the fraction 1/1 as an approximation. The fact that 0.999.. gets a rollover to 1 and 0.333... does not round up means that 0.999.. = 1/1 is not a proof that it is a finite 1. As stated in the link geometric series applied to decimals yields a fractional approximation.
0.999... = 1, 1 does not yield 0.999... and 0.333... = 1/3 = 0.333... An unresolved discrepancy. Conclusion the algorithm does not serve as a proof, it serves to provide fractional approximations.
If you disagree you have to explain the discrepancy between the results for 0.333... and 0.999... Is there a difference between the two other than the fact that for 0.999.. the algorithm can only yield 1/1, an artifact of the equation not a proof.
If you want to continue the debate, answer the above. I do not question the generation of a/1-r by a series, I question the conclusion of a proof. and interpretation of results. You are reading more into the method than it is intended to supply.
The series is by definition an approximation to 0.999... No different than a series approximation to trig functions,
I stayed why I reject the conclusion.After this I will just be reating myself.
I have applied limits and series in real world problems. I'll go with my experience and analysis of the conclusion.
0.555.. . is a definition, an unchanging infinite number of 5s.
Converting to a geometric series and applying finite arithmetic is not the definition.
Infinite and finite are mutually exclusive. 0.999... can never equal a finite 1. )0333.. results in 1/3 with no incremting to a higher values, 1.3 = 0.333...
The method applied to 0.999.. yields the fraction 1/1 as an approximation. The fact that 0.999.. gets a rollover to 1 and 0.333... does not round up means that 0.999.. = 1/1 is not a proof that it is a finite 1. As stated in the link geometric series applied to decimals yields a fractional approximation.
0.999... = 1, 1 does not yield 0.999... and 0.333... = 1/3 = 0.333... An unresolved discrepancy. Conclusion the algorithm does not serve as a proof, it serves to provide fractional approximations.
If you disagree you have to explain the discrepancy between the results for 0.333... and 0.999... Is there a difference between the two other than the fact that for 0.999.. the algorithm can only yield 1/1, an artifact of the equation not a proof.
If you want to continue the debate, answer the above. I do not question the generation of a/1-r by a series, I question the conclusion of a proof. and interpretation of results. You are reading more into the method than it is intended to supply.
The series is by definition an approximation to 0.999... No different than a series approximation to trig functions,
You accept that 0.333... = 1/3
How can you possibly miss that multiplying by three gives:
0.999... = 3/3 ?
Or is the problem that you don't think 3/3 = 1 ?
Are you really that stupid, or are you just trolling?
I stayed why I reject the conclusion.After this I will just be reating myself.
I have applied limits and series in real world problems. I'll go with my experience and analysis of the conclusion.
0.555.. . is a definition, an unchanging infinite number of 5s.
Converting to a geometric series and applying finite arithmetic is not the definition.
No conversion is going on. "an infinite number of 5s" is the definition of the string. Used as a label, the geometric series is what this string refers to, always did, without any conversion needed.
Infinite and finite are mutually exclusive. 0.999... can never equal a finite 1. )0333.. results in 1/3 with no incremting to a higher values, 1.3 = 0.333...
The method applied to 0.999.. yields the fraction 1/1 as an approximation. The fact that 0.999.. gets a rollover to 1 and 0.333... does not round up means that 0.999.. = 1/1 is not a proof that it is a finite 1. As stated in the link geometric series applied to decimals yields a fractional approximation.
0.999... = 1, 1 does not yield 0.999... and 0.333... = 1/3 = 0.333... An unresolved discrepancy. Conclusion the algorithm does not serve as a proof, it serves to provide fractional approximations.
What discrepancy? Both the number that's the sum of the series [3 * 10 ^ -i for i in range(inf)] and the number that's the sum of the series [9 * 10 ^ -i for i in range(inf)] are finite real and rational numbers. The fact that one of them can be shortened to 1.0 or 1 in decimal notation while the other cannot is an idiosyncracy of decimal notation. In duodecimal, 1/3 is 0.4, plain and simple and very much finite.
I stayed why I reject the conclusion.After this I will just be reating myself.
I have applied limits and series in real world problems. I'll go with my experience and analysis of the conclusion.
0.555.. . is a definition, an unchanging infinite number of 5s.
Converting to a geometric series and applying finite arithmetic is not the definition.
Infinite and finite are mutually exclusive. 0.999... can never equal a finite 1. )0333.. results in 1/3 with no incremting to a higher values, 1.3 = 0.333...
The method applied to 0.999.. yields the fraction 1/1 as an approximation. The fact that 0.999.. gets a rollover to 1 and 0.333... does not round up means that 0.999.. = 1/1 is not a proof that it is a finite 1. As stated in the link geometric series applied to decimals yields a fractional approximation.
0.999... = 1, 1 does not yield 0.999... and 0.333... = 1/3 = 0.333... An unresolved discrepancy. Conclusion the algorithm does not serve as a proof, it serves to provide fractional approximations.
If you disagree you have to explain the discrepancy between the results for 0.333... and 0.999... Is there a difference between the two other than the fact that for 0.999.. the algorithm can only yield 1/1, an artifact of the equation not a proof.
If you want to continue the debate, answer the above. I do not question the generation of a/1-r by a series, I question the conclusion of a proof. and interpretation of results. You are reading more into the method than it is intended to supply.
The series is by definition an approximation to 0.999... No different than a series approximation to trig functions,
<definition>
A ”decimal number” is an ordered set of integers An (where n is all negative and positive integers and for each An < 9 and An >= 0.) and a corresponding value = Sum of An*10^n (for all n)
</definition>
Do you agree on this?
I do not agree that 0.999... and the series representaion are the same thing. By definition 0.999... is infinite and can not be reduced to a finite number. The only comclusion is that the method does not infer a finite 1 equality, it infers a fractional 9/9 approximation.