You're going to send me a rabid hedgehog come September, aren't you? 

And that is a good idea

Evil Viking girls; not to be trusted.

You're the one who got me to do math stuff instead of studying for my exams

Men; not to be trusted.

By the way, did you know many roots can be approximated VERY closely by averaging the closest fractions above and below their values? It's something I noticed with the "22/7 squared is ALMOST 10" thing; 10/7 squared is 100/49, a little more than 2, and 7/5 squared is 49/25, a little LESS than 2. The average is easy to find (fractions where the denominator of one is the numerator of the other work best for this: )
(10/7+7/5)/2=
50+49/2X35=
99/70=
1 29/70.
There, the square root of two approximated as a rational number IN MY HEAD. How accurate is it?
Well, I actually used Excel for 29/70, 'cos I'm lazy (it's really just 0.428571... -0.0.142857... after all) and it gave 1.414285714. For the square root of 2 it gives 1.414213562. So treating 99/70 as the square root of 2 is accurate to four significant figures. If you're curious, squaring the former value gives 2.000204082, accurate to three significant figures. It's more precise than the tables of squares printed in my HS textbook for Honors Trig; they only went to three decimal places, but I can get an extra magnitude of precision by averaging simple fractions. The only real challenge is finding fractions whose squares are close to integers (e.g. 9/4 squared is 81/16, a little more than 5, and 20/9 squared is 400/81, a little less, yielding 161/72 as an average; 2 17/72=2.236111111 rather than 2.236067977, and the square is 5.000192901. )
Honorbound and honored to be Bonded to Mahtaliel Sedai
Last First in wotmania Chat
Slightly better than chocolate.
Love still can't be coerced.
Please Don't Eat the Newbies!
LoL. Be well, RAFOlk.
Last First in wotmania Chat
Slightly better than chocolate.
Love still can't be coerced.
Please Don't Eat the Newbies!

LoL. Be well, RAFOlk.
Continuing the Math Theme, WTF Is Up with the Seven?
25/05/2010 02:12:09 AM
- 648 Views
25/05/2010 08:19:12 AM
- 480 Views
Number theory holds a concept called "cyclic numbers."
25/05/2010 06:04:43 AM
- 538 Views
"If leading zeros are not permitted on numerals, then 142857 is the only cyclic number in decimal. "
25/05/2010 06:27:36 AM
- 543 Views

Happy Birthday...?
25/05/2010 08:56:59 AM
- 413 Views

You're a day early
25/05/2010 09:10:30 AM
- 428 Views

Got me on a technicality.
25/05/2010 09:19:54 AM
- 329 Views
Re: Got me on a technicality.
25/05/2010 09:27:59 AM
- 368 Views
But we're AWESOME!
25/05/2010 09:47:30 AM
- 469 Views
25/05/2010 09:50:43 AM
- 346 Views

Number THEORY is great fun, but too many folks make math too tedious, I'm afraid.
25/05/2010 09:53:21 AM
- 384 Views

You tend to get cyclic repeats when dividing by primes
25/05/2010 11:58:34 AM
- 563 Views
I actually DO feel like taking a course on number theory.
25/05/2010 12:12:10 PM
- 521 Views
Re: I actually DO feel like taking a course on number theory.
25/05/2010 01:46:10 PM
- 364 Views
Well, I'm not vouching for Wikipedias claim, just reiterating it.
25/05/2010 02:35:23 PM
- 580 Views
It's usually right but I wouldn't but much value on the implied importance
25/05/2010 04:22:52 PM
- 425 Views
If you say so; I really try hard not to channel Pythagoras.
26/05/2010 09:26:22 AM
- 593 Views

Re: If you say so; I really try hard not to channel Pythagoras.
26/05/2010 10:00:37 AM
- 540 Views
