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toking
Algebra, Geometry, Calculus, Trig, all that good stuff Mark Unseen   Jun 30 14:50 UTC 1997

    This is it, the place to come and praise or discuss those shiney black
and magnificent numbers.
    Their curves, their angels, the sheer magnificence of them all. 
    Everything from using calculators to obscure refrences to that PBS
sensation "Math Net".
    Reverse Polish notation? No problem
    Advanced calculus? No problem
    Geometric proofs? No problem

    Get your fork and dig in.
132 responses total.
toking
response 1 of 132: Mark Unseen   Jun 30 14:52 UTC 1997

By the way, while I respect math and all its glory, I am positivley
incompetent when it comes to its application.

I won't contribute any answers in this item, but I probably will ask
some question <maybe>.
danr
response 2 of 132: Mark Unseen   Jun 30 15:10 UTC 1997

I'm a real engineer when it comes to mathematics.  Unless someone can show me a
practical application, I'm not that interested in it.
mary
response 3 of 132: Mark Unseen   Jun 30 15:33 UTC 1997

I don't tend to embrace a lot of "wish I would have" type
thinking but I do wish I'd consistently used algebra 
so that it would be there now when I need it.

An example - just last Saturday, while waiting at the airport,
I was trying to figure out the time difference between Ann Arbor
and London, England, as well as the flight time simply by using
the known departure and arrival times both ways.  The plane
left DTW at 7:25 p.m., local time, arriving Heathrow at 7:30 a.m.,
London time.  Returning, it left London at 10:50 a.m., London time,
arriving Ann Arbor, 1:50 p.m., local time.  Now, I would have
had to think this out long-hand, if you will.  Whereas John
took pen to paper and had the answer in moments.  There was
a bit of rounding that had to take place in consideration
of the jet stream but algebra worked in a very practical 
application.

I wish I hadn't let my mathematics skills get so rusty.
toking
response 4 of 132: Mark Unseen   Jun 30 18:39 UTC 1997

When I cxan remember what to do, I kinda like algebra, my problem is
that I am usually just plain confused by it.
remmers
response 5 of 132: Mark Unseen   Jun 30 20:44 UTC 1997

Re #3: It was a simple problem of two linear equations in two
unknowns. I've taught that stuff often enough that I can do it
in my sleep, almost.

This one had the slight extra complication that it was a
Diophantine equation in one of the variables (i.e. the solution
had to be a whole number), since you don't have fractional
differences in time zones (except maybe in places like Nova
Scotia).
i
response 6 of 132: Mark Unseen   Jul 1 01:08 UTC 1997

 i*pi
e     + 1 = 0

(I want to attribute to Euler, but I keep getting the feeling that that's
off.  Do you recall, John?)
valerie
response 7 of 132: Mark Unseen   Jul 1 05:31 UTC 1997

This response has been erased.

remmers
response 8 of 132: Mark Unseen   Jul 1 13:28 UTC 1997

Re #6: I believe it's called Euler's identity, but I could be
misremembering. The equation is interesting in that it connects
five fundamental mathematical constants: 0, 1, e, pi, i.
nt
response 9 of 132: Mark Unseen   Jul 1 15:25 UTC 1997

Anyone ever tried placing 8 queens(ministers or whatever you call) on a chess
board without their powers clashing each other? I guess its an Artificial
Intelligenc(AI) question.
remmers
response 10 of 132: Mark Unseen   Jul 1 15:36 UTC 1997

Not really AI. I (and many other people as well) have written
programs to generate and display all such configurations. It
turns out that there are 12 essentially distinct solutions.
(Where by "essentially distinct" I mean that one is not simply
a rotation or reflection of another.)

See Edsger Dijkstra's essay in the book _Structured Programming_
by Dijkstra, Hoare, and Dahl for an excellent discussion of this
problem and its algorithmic solution.
i
response 11 of 132: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 01:50 UTC 1997

Re:  #8
Alas, no.  Rudin (_Real & Complex_, 3rd ed., p. 2) uses the title "Euler's
                            it  
identity" for the equation e   = cos t + i sin t.  (Meanwhile, Ahlfors
calls that formula "Euler's formula" in _Complex Analysis_, 3rd ed., p. 42.) 
The source I first saw it in (I want to say Rudin, but can't find it in
either _Principles_ or _Real & Complex_) noted the property you did and
attributed the formula to one of the old masters.  

But I now think you're right that it's Euler. 
mary
response 12 of 132: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 12:36 UTC 1997

Re: #7  Carlos is taking a summer term at Cambridge.

Yep, it takes 7 hours to fly to London and 8 hours to
fly back, against the jet stream.
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