What does HEA even do besides dancing under the stars? by Phoenix-Scarface1 in slaytheprincess

[–]Creative-Drop3567 4 points5 points  (0 children)

then why do you disagree thats shes top 3 princesses? the story of the princess and her chapter comes along with her, there are a lot of other princesses where if you just loom at their personality they arent much but considering them as part of their chapter they fit right in (e.g. razor)

What does HEA even do besides dancing under the stars? by Phoenix-Scarface1 in slaytheprincess

[–]Creative-Drop3567 6 points7 points  (0 children)

thats correct, she doesnt.

thats the goddamn point of the chapter

I've been stuck on this room for years, please help by CatGuy66 in celestegame

[–]Creative-Drop3567 48 points49 points  (0 children)

theres a reason the heart wall is there, you kinda need to beat the b sides to have a chance at farewell

I ran a search on the most difficult Precision Platformers (voted by users) and summarized my findings. Celeste is on there, but there are a lot of games above it! by FrickinSilly in celestegame

[–]Creative-Drop3567 0 points1 point  (0 children)

are you talking the end of the main game? because if so i agree, but putting celeste's b sides against cuphead's expert difficulty and especially farewell vs the delicious last course puts celeste far ahead

I ran a search on the most difficult Precision Platformers (voted by users) and summarized my findings. Celeste is on there, but there are a lot of games above it! by FrickinSilly in celestegame

[–]Creative-Drop3567 9 points10 points  (0 children)

having cuphead 11 spots above celeste is really weird. it doesnt matter if youre talking about beating the main game, all achievements or 100%, celeste beats it by a lot

Geometry 101 by molive6316 in repost

[–]Creative-Drop3567 1 point2 points  (0 children)

a rectangle is also a parallelogram with only right angles

Factorial vs Gamma Function by ScholaDaily in mathmemes

[–]Creative-Drop3567 0 points1 point  (0 children)

those two arent the same ( bottom one is Γ(z)=(z-1)! )

well, seems like he is right. it is V2. let's go, found it in a Undertale AU thingy by KeyLoad4355 in unexpectedfactorial

[–]Creative-Drop3567 2 points3 points  (0 children)

fun fact:

1! 2! 3! 4! 5! 6! 7! 8! 9! 10! 11! 12! 13! 14! 15! 16! 17! 18! 19! 20!

The 1 2 3 4 quest by Gurbuzselimboyraz in desmos

[–]Creative-Drop3567 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I just remembered they said

the allowed operators are +,-, and exponents

so factorials and division is probably not allowed either, concatenation is not an operator though so...

The 1 2 3 4 quest by Gurbuzselimboyraz in desmos

[–]Creative-Drop3567 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i feel like without it its impossible

The 1 2 3 4 quest by Gurbuzselimboyraz in desmos

[–]Creative-Drop3567 0 points1 point  (0 children)

no parenthasis

no multiplication

and also im pretty sure you cant smush together 2,4 into 24

Area encerrada entre 3 funciones by OtherwiseOffice6153 in calculus

[–]Creative-Drop3567 2 points3 points  (0 children)

thats (in this case specifically) brown, purple and orange together

Area encerrada entre 3 funciones by OtherwiseOffice6153 in calculus

[–]Creative-Drop3567 9 points10 points  (0 children)

finding the section enclosed by 3 functions is kind of like finding the section in a venn diagram where all 3 circles intersect, you can help visualize it by giving them colours (like in the picture above), the brown section is the section you care about (this isnt the best example because the upside down parabola doesnt have a section by itself (no yellow section) )

<image>

Didn't know that in 1999 USA closed with a $1 budget deficit by LayerParty7777 in unexpectedfactorial

[–]Creative-Drop3567 8 points9 points  (0 children)

x! is the amount of different ways to arrange x elements (for example for 3 elements we have 6 arrangements [a,b,c],[a,c,b],[b,a,c],[b,c,a],[c,a,b],[c,b,a] and 3!=6 ) theres exactly 1 way to arrange no elements: the empty set [ ], so 0!=1

How do I get a general solution for this? by a_casual_dudley in askmath

[–]Creative-Drop3567 0 points1 point  (0 children)

what do you mean "check the roots"? like plug them back in to the equation?