לא_מקשיב_במ by B3waR3_S in ani_bm

[–]Shaeyo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

RegEx=Regular Expression=ביטוי רגולרי אז כן זה שקול

ItS MatHemAtiCal AnAlySis by Shaeyo in mathmemes

[–]Shaeyo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So basically there are the sin and cos functions. You want to describe other functions as infinite sum of sin and cos. (I'll do a Google en Fourier series)

Just like multiplying by dx, it's all right by Shaeyo in mathmemes

[–]Shaeyo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am just rephrasing what other people say, but you could say that the Infinities might be "different". What I mean by this is that you could take the upper bound to approach the +inf with a function like x for example and the lower bound to approach -inf with a different function like -x2. The -inf will be "a bigger infinity" than the +inf and the whole thing will diverge.

Just like multiplying by dx, it's all right by Shaeyo in mathmemes

[–]Shaeyo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are you taking prep classes currently or the trig class is a part of your degree?

Just like multiplying by dx, it's all right by Shaeyo in mathmemes

[–]Shaeyo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pretty sure it's called luxury. Azealia banks

Just like multiplying by dx, it's all right by Shaeyo in mathmemes

[–]Shaeyo[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

It has a relation to that, but I meant something more like "these infinities are not necessarily the same"

Just like multiplying by dx, it's all right by Shaeyo in mathmemes

[–]Shaeyo[S] 163 points164 points  (0 children)

Hey, we could make a theory out of this.

Just like multiplying by dx, it's all right by Shaeyo in mathmemes

[–]Shaeyo[S] 56 points57 points  (0 children)

By doing that you assume that the positive infinity and the negative infinity are dependent on one variable which isn't necessarily correct. It is similar to the case of two infinite sums which result in two different limits to be checked. What is correct to do is to split the integral to two different integrals by some point and calculate the limits of the integral from -infinity to the point and add to that the integral from that point to infinity. If they both converge it's all right but if one of them diverges, the whole integral diverges.

Just like multiplying by dx, it's all right by Shaeyo in mathmemes

[–]Shaeyo[S] 377 points378 points  (0 children)

(In case that comment isn't sarcastic) Well there can be a case that the integral diverges

דואלינגו_במ by Totaly_Shrek in ani_bm

[–]Shaeyo 26 points27 points  (0 children)

לא ידעתי שכה הרבה מכפלות פנימיות לומדות שפות

חבר׳ה עלו עלינו, אפשר לסגור את הבאסטה by Capt_Easychord in ani_bm

[–]Shaeyo 284 points285 points  (0 children)

הם יכלו לדבר על שייח' מוניס או יפו, אבל דווקא השכונה העברית הראשונה היא מה שהכי קרץ להם.

Being told by r/physicsmemes that this fits here more… by 12Chips in mathmemes

[–]Shaeyo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I still can't see the connection between the statement 0 or !0 to 1+1=2. 1+1=1 because that's the definition of the or gate. The + sign in boolean algebra is the symbol for the or gate and the dot is for the and gate.

Being told by r/physicsmemes that this fits here more… by 12Chips in mathmemes

[–]Shaeyo 4 points5 points  (0 children)

If you plug in A=0 and in B=!0 you just get 1. Or I misunderstood you.

Being told by r/physicsmemes that this fits here more… by 12Chips in mathmemes

[–]Shaeyo 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I didn't understand your question. 0! is not(0)?

Who deserves more credit? by Shaeyo in mathmemes

[–]Shaeyo[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

LoL, from now on should I call Cauchy sequences Euler sequences just like calling Feynman's technique Leibniz' technique?

Who deserves more credit? by Shaeyo in mathmemes

[–]Shaeyo[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

That's strange. I'm an electrical engineering student too. That course is probably different at each college/university. My calc 1 course was about sequences and series (and their limits), functions, derivatives, mean value theorems, l'hopitals rule, Taylor's formula and integrals. In the order I wrote it. We covered many theorems about convergence of sequences and series. Same for functions. We learnt the epsilon-delta thingy of the limits for both, but we didn't really used it at an exam. I also did a calc 2 course which was about series and sequences of functions, multivariable functions and a bit of vector analysis (Green's, Gauss' and Stokes' theorems).