Well…
g^1/2^ = e = 3
Comment on Virgin Physicists
My_IFAKs___gone@lemmy.world 11 months agoUgh, 3 factorial is most definitely not equal to π. It’s something more like, idk, 9? Honestly I don’t even know how I got here; I majored in Latin and barely past
Well…
g^1/2^ = e = 3
3 = 10^(1/2)
e = π = σ = ε = µ = Avogadro’s Number = k = g = G = α = i = j = 3
(at least that’s how they all look when viewed from ∞)
Shouldn’t have i in there, or j if you’re using that to represent the imaginary number.
The complex plane is separate.
Let epsilon be substantially greater than zero…
The list of things I shouldn’t do, but do regardless, stretches past infinity.
I was not ready for this truth bomb
Barely passed your English classes as well I assume. /s
They barely passed me.
Math is a liquid. Or a language.
My high school English teacher still has night terrors about me starting sentences with conjunctions. And that was the least of their problems.
Have you been chillin with the phunkadelic crew sober?
In case anyone wondering factorial is
n! = n * n-1 * n-2 * … * 3 * 2 * 1
Erm. In what world do you live that the precedent in your expression is right?
In all languages and countries I know multiplication binds more strongly than addition. So what you wrote would be
n^2 - n - 2n - 3n…
I wrote it correctly. It is the definition of a factorial.
Tar_alcaran@sh.itjust.works 11 months ago
π = 1
3! = 10
DogWater@lemmy.world 11 months ago
Isn’t 3 factorial equal to 6??
ChaoticNeutralCzech@feddit.org 11 months ago
Seriously, if you’re working with analog electronics, 𝛑=√1̅0̅ is close enough. If you need more precision, use active error correction, and in the 21st century that’s easiest to do digitally anyway.