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Famine1/3 = 0.33333333...
3 x 0.33333333... = 0.99999999...
Therefore 3/3 = 0.99999999...
But 3 x 1/3 = 3/3 = 1
Therefore 1 = 0.99999999...
And no messing around with algebra is required.
x = 0.9999...
10x = 9.9999...
10x - x = 9.9999... - 0.9999...
9x = 9.0000...
9x = 9
x = 1
danoffThe problem with this is that 1/3=0.3333 infinitely repeating - which isn't properly represented in decimal form. When you include remainders 1/3 = 0.3 remainder .1
3 times 0.3 + .1 = 1
Again, the inability to represent an infinitely repeating series (which isn't a real number afterall because it constantly changes as you go one more decimal out). Do the experiment with x=.999
10x=9.99
10x-x=8.991
9x=8.991
x=8.991/9=.999
FamineNevertheless, it is universally accepted by mathematicians that it is true.
It, like radioactive half lives, is a modern day Zeno's Paradox (pick one - they're all essentially the same. Something can never get somewhere, because it has to travel half the distance first, then half that distance, then half that distance, and so on).
danoffIt's an accepted error, but it remains an error. As soon as you perform a mathematical function on 0.99999... (repeating) you've introduced an error in the system. Pointing out the inconsistencies that error causes makes sense only from the point of view of reminding us that the error exists due to convenience.
danoffThe paradox is faulty. I tried (and failed) to explain this to my philosphy instructor in college. When you travel half the distance, you take half the time... and so on and so forth until you're travelling an infinitesimal distance in an infintesimal time. The paradox is ruined by considering time because as distance goes to zero so does time.
Magic069I imagine this is exactly what members of an engineering frat do all day.
I think I like being dumb, but creative. It seems more... fun.
Famine if you're so smart. Type all the numbers in Pi. You'd be dead before you were done.
3.1415926535859 is as far as I know. 22/7=3.142857 (bold is repeating)amp8822/7 (I believe)...
Da-da!
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IThere's a program you can download that calculated Pi to like 128 million digits.Yeah I know it's infinite. The longest i've ever seen Pi to be written/printed is 2,000,000 numbers.
Even the universe wouldn't fit all the paper needed to print Pi. It's quite mind boggling.![]()
It's actually more like calculus than algebra.gaybirdI suck at algebra so right now this is all going right over my head.
FamineAs you can see, the problem isn't any error, but the attempt to express in decimals numbers which cannot be expressed in decimals - it's a flaw inherent to the decimal number system.
I don't see any error--nor any place where algebra/logic breaks down.danoffAgreed. By trying to represent the number in decimal form we introduce an error - and so logic (algebra) breaks down and does not give the correct result.
skip0110Show me a computation where I replace 1 with 0.99999.... and the result changes.
three times point three recurring equals one & not a recurring decimalFamine
3 x 0.33333333... = 0.99999999...
does'nt really followFamineTherefore 3/3 = 0.99999999...
But we are talking about .999... recurring to infinity, not any sort of terminating decimal. Without being rigorus, you can see in that computation that 10/0.999.... = 10 exactly, when you account for an infinite muber of digits.amp88...
10 / 1 = 10
10 / 0.99999 = 10.00010000100001000010000100001
10 / 0.9999999999 = 10.00000000100000000010000000001
...
1/3 approximatively = 0.33333Famine1/3 = 0.33333333...
3 x 0.33333333... = 0.99999999...
Therefore 3/3 = 0.99999999...
But 3 x 1/3 = 3/3 = 1
Therefore 1 = 0.99999999...
And no messing around with algebra is required.
It is proven to be unity. I will do it right here.DeLoreanBrownpoint nine recurring is not proved for unity
but in most quantative respects it would have the value of a totality ( almost all of one gallon is usually a gallon )