Apocalypse. Problem solved. Lets all go get hammered now.
[QUOTE=shatteredwindow;25351834]Say what you mean and mean what you say, don't say that the number closest to 0 is infinity and mean the opposite, you clearly said that if you look at my above quote where it is highlighted where you defintely said those words.
[editline]10:01PM[/editline]
and 1/0 is not infinity, it is undefined.[/QUOTE]
okay listen ugly. when i say "i.e. a decimal with infinity zeroes followed by a 1" after saying "the number closest to zero", that means that what im saying is that "the number closest to zero" is "a decimal with infinity zeroes followed by a one".
fucking parenthetical statements, how do they work?
Just fuck off you dumb prick, it's not even worth it any more.
mad that im right, bro?
come at me.
(hee! this thread is so much more entertaining, nay, all threads are so much more entertaining, when read in jbieb's voice.)
sorry for big image
but OP read this unless you're a 12 year old
[img]http://img.chan4chan.com/img/2010-04-08/inhf5t.jpg[/img]
1. I get a real life BSOD.
2. The sky is falling!
3. Syntax error.
You get banned.
[URL=http://img192.imageshack.us/i/lifesaver.png/][IMG]http://img192.imageshack.us/img192/6/lifesaver.png[/IMG][/URL]
You guys don't know it yet, but I just saved all of your lives.
Absolutely nothing happens. It's an undefined value, which means it's equal to no value.
When everyone says it equals infinity, or negative infinity, that's actually what the limit as x [b]approaches[/b] zero (from one of two directions. Coming from positive x values, it approaches infinity, negative is naturally negative) of 1/x [b]approaches[/b], as previously stated. Actually the limit of 1/x doesn't exist. The limits from the right and left go to different values. Go look at a graph of 1/x. Tell me what value of y it approaches as you get closer to 0. Got one? I thought not.
Notice how approaches is bolded. That's because infinity is just the name we gave for a number so large that we can't possibly write of fathom it, because it has no end. So we approach that never ending value, but can actually never reach a defined value for it, because it doesn't have one, because it has no end.
Simple calculus shit.
What a waste of time ^
√-1
:frog:
:frogbon:
Chuck Norris CAN divide by 0.
He also know the last number of Pi.
Black holes are where God divided by zero.
How many 0s can you fit inside of 1?
The obvious answer is ∞
[QUOTE=Killerelf12;25370292]Absolutely nothing happens. It's an undefined value, which means it's equal to no value.
When everyone says it equals infinity, or negative infinity, that's actually what the limit as x [B]approaches[/B] zero (from one of two directions. Coming from positive x values, it approaches infinity, negative is naturally negative) of 1/x [B]approaches[/B], as previously stated. Actually the limit of 1/x doesn't exist. The limits from the right and left go to different values. Go look at a graph of 1/x. Tell me what value of y it approaches as you get closer to 0. Got one? I thought not.
Notice how approaches is bolded. That's because infinity is just the name we gave for a number so large that we can't possibly write of fathom it, because it has no end. So we approach that never ending value, but can actually never reach a defined value for it, because it doesn't have one, because it has no end.
Simple calculus shit.[/QUOTE]
Calculus can suck my penis
Ewwww, limits...
No thanks... No thanks...
Well IMO there are two answers. 1/0 is either infinite or it's 0. There are no 0's in 1. Or 0 as a value there is unlimited.
[editline]13th October 2010[/editline]
[QUOTE=Javyer;25371433]Chuck Norris CAN divide by 0.
He also know the last number of Pi.[/QUOTE]
Chuck Norris is the worlds be comedian. Yet he still can't think of a good Chuck Norris joke. I don't think someone as inferior as you won't be able to either.
[QUOTE=Juice_Layer;25370595]What a waste of time ^[/QUOTE]
I had nothing better going on. Also had just gotten out of a calculus class.
[QUOTE=superdinoman;25374194]How many 0s can you fit inside of 1?
The obvious answer is ∞
[/QUOTE]
I agree with this post.
Makes sense.
[editline]13th October 2010[/editline]
Also: [img]http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2668640/infinity.PNG[/img]
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