How to fix MAXVAL problems...
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@PJH said:
uint256_t
?They don't have a type for multiple precision complex numbers? What's the world coming to?...
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They don't have a type for multiple precision complex numbers?
I wouldn't use it for sequence numbers if they did…
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I wouldn't use it for sequence numbers if they did…
Why not? When you run out of all the numbers along a+0i you simply move along to, say, a+0.00000001i....
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I got MAXVAL problems but an INT ain't one
I'll show myself out.
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Why not? When you run out of all the numbers along a+0i you simply move along to, say, a+0.00000001i....
Complex numbers aren't exactly known for being well-ordered...
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@PJH said:
Why not? When you run out of all the numbers along a+0i you simply move along to, say, a+0.00000001i....
Complex numbers aren't exactly known for being well-ordered...
I see no problem using a 4D graph to represent quaternions...
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ObOT: one internet to the first to recognise what this is:
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Best lightbox expansion ever, 10/10
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Oops
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An equation in 2 unknowns (x and y).
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Something with six major clauses? (Oh, and it's at least in the complex domain.)
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a formula.
Indeed, but what for?
An equation in 2 unknowns (x and y).
The best kind of correct...
Oh, and it's at least in the complex domain.
To paraphrase the author
if you don't some of the roots will be undefined
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An equation in 2 unknowns (x and y).
[spoiler]Aren't those those generally something you plot?[/spoiler]
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@PleegWat said:
An equation in 2 unknowns (x and y).
Aren't those those generally something you plot?
One equation takes away 1 degree of freedom. If x and y are real numbers, the problem is 2-dimensional, and the result is 1-dimensional (a set of lines).
In this case however, the
= 0i
at the end suggests the problem is intended to be complex. That means the single equation takes away 2 degrees of freedom (real and imaginary parts are 0) and the solution is 2-dimensional in a 4-dimensional space. Which rather puts a damper on the plotting.
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Which rather puts a damper on the plotting.
You could project it into 3-space I guess…
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2 dimensions are sufficient.