• 🏆 Texturing Contest #33 is OPEN! Contestants must re-texture a SD unit model found in-game (Warcraft 3 Classic), recreating the unit into a peaceful NPC version. 🔗Click here to enter!
  • It's time for the first HD Modeling Contest of 2024. Join the theme discussion for Hive's HD Modeling Contest #6! Click here to post your idea!

Do you believe that 1= .999~

Is 1 = 0.999~

  • I believe that the first calculation is correct, but not the second. 0.999~ = 1.

    Votes: 2 9.1%
  • I believe that the second calculation is correct, but not the first one. 1 = 0.999~

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • I believe both calculations of this are correct. 1 = 0.999~ and reverse.

    Votes: 6 27.3%
  • I do not believe in this.

    Votes: 14 63.6%

  • Total voters
    22
Status
Not open for further replies.
Level 3
Joined
Sep 18, 2007
Messages
47
If we call 0.999~ for X, then
9.999~ = 10X. If so, then
10X-X = 9X, thus
9.999~-0.999~ = 9.
If 9X = 9, then X = 1. We agreed that we called 0.999~ for X, thus
0.999 = 1.

Also;
1/3=0.333~
0.333~x3 = 0.999~
And thus 1 = 0.999~

More about this found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/0.999...

Now, this is a coincidence created by the way our numerical system works, and would not be the case with certain other numerical systems.
Do you believe?

[Note; There is a thread about this, but it was made in March and is now closed.]

EDIT: Thanks to Samuraid for the idea of adding a wikipedia links.
 
Last edited:
Level 3
Joined
Sep 18, 2007
Messages
47
If you can comprehend infinite decimals, then maybe you can say no.

Can you? I were of the opinion that it was if you had no definition of infinite numbers, you wouldn't understand it, because then you'd round it off at the end, and 1 would equal to 1. Triple of 0.333~ will always be 0.999~, but since it's a 9, calculators and basic math tells you to round it off upwards.

That's the problem with infinite numbers.
 
Level 20
Joined
Apr 22, 2007
Messages
1,960
0.99999 to infinite digits can be represented with limits, I think.

But that doesn't make it equal to 1. There is still an infinitissimal value added to it. Of course, when you have infinite digits, you can substitue that value with 1, because the difference is tiny. Other than that, saying things like:
0.59 = 0.6
is completely ridiculous -.-

Equivalence should only be noted when 0.999 has infinite 9 digits.
 
Level 13
Joined
Jun 21, 2007
Messages
883
I come to the internet for THIS IS SPARTA pics and pr0n, not math. -.-'

Hence forth you need a "I don't care" poll option.
 
Level 12
Joined
Aug 18, 2006
Messages
1,193
3 Words for you

Your math fails

0.999~ x 10 = 9.999~ with 90 at the end

now, 90 - 99 = -9

therefore, 9.0 - 0.000~ with a 9 at the end, becomes 8.999~ with 1 at the end

so that means our final calculation becomes 9x = 8.999~ with 1 at the end

which concludes, 0.999~ is not equal to 1
 
Last edited:
Level 9
Joined
Oct 15, 2006
Messages
339
Well, isn't this how differentiation works?

f'(x) = (f(x+h)-f(x))/h

Where h is the smallest number before 0.

So technically, if this weren't right, then differential calculus would be bogus.

A correction in terminology - Smallest DIFFERENCE before 0.

Infinity is not a number, and therefore 0.999~ can never even REACH one.
However, infinity is represented by a circle, or figure eight, each an enclosure, representing one whole, or no difference; cyclic.

One minus infinity = 0.999~
but
Infinity plus one could be anything, any number, as it does not stop. Infinity never started but hey.. hahaha "plus one" is like saying "plus 'X'", they are both the same.



EDIT:

3 Words for you

Your math fails

0.999~ x 10 = 9.999~ with 90 at the end

now, 90 - 99 = -9

therefore, 9.0 = -0.0~ with 9 at the end

so that means our final calculation becomes 9x = 8.999~ with 1 at the end

which concludes, 0.999~ is not equal to 1

Your math fails, and math in general just sucks.

Infinity doesn't have an end so there cannot be a '0' at "the end".

You cannot multiply infinity, at least in numbers, with the same numbers.. You cannot have 10 infinitys of the same number, they would always cancel themselves out to one set. That's what i mean by same numbers, like the given example of 0.999~

As for 0.999~ times, or even divided by, 0.888~ (or any other number), you still have a decimal because you cannot compute what does not end for you to compute. You have to wait for infinity for it to end before you could finish a calculation.

I have no idea how you got to your conclusion, but it is correct.

Point (.) ANYTHING is just a fraction. Think of a pie chart. Now think of 1/2 of the pie. Then 1/3, 1/4, 1/5 and so on, infinitely. The pie slice, from half, gets smaller and smaller, forever, but does not quite ever reach a full pie, or whole amount.
 
Level 9
Joined
Oct 15, 2006
Messages
339
.99999999 to infinity IS equal to one.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/0.999...

Samuraid already posted this link.

You can't get TO infinity. hahahaaaaahhhhhh.. hmm.

Do you believe everything you read, are told? Do you believe it like a fool because it's popular opinion?

Yes, infinity can be REPRESENTED as one (1) but it is not the same as one. And one is not the same as infinity, nor can one equal infinity.

0.999~ is a fraction of one and therefore cannot be equal to or the same as one. This is basic math.
 
Level 27
Joined
May 30, 2007
Messages
2,872
I come to the internet for THIS IS SPARTA pics and pr0n, not math. -.-'

Hence forth you need a "I don't care" poll option.
Then don't vote. Do I really need to spell it out for you?
0.999~ x 10 = 9.999~ with 90 at the end

now, 90 - 99 = -9

therefore, 9.0 - 0.000~ with a 9 at the end, becomes 8.999~ with 1 at the end

so that means our final calculation becomes 9x = 8.999~ with 1 at the end

which concludes, 0.999~ is not equal to 1
No, see, it goes on forever. There is never a 0, 1, or 9 at the end. There is no end.
How can it go on forever you ask?
Well, give me any number, and I'll give you something greater, something less, and something with more digits.
math in general just sucks.
Your brain lacks the capacity to understand why math is awesome.
You cannot multiply infinity, at least in numbers, with the same numbers.. You cannot have 10 infinitys of the same number, they would always cancel themselves out to one set. That's what i mean by same numbers, like the given example of 0.999~
0.999... going on forever is not comparable to infinity.
Also, consider a line (infinity) has an infinite number of points.
Now, consider a plane (infinity * infinity) which also has an infinite amount of points.
Do you believe everything you read, are told? Do you believe it like a fool because it's popular opinion?
Did you notice that the poll clearly illustrates that popular opinion (in this forum anyway) is that this is not true? I bet you didn't, and furthermore, I bet you're right about popular opinion being wrong (in this forum anyway).
0.999~ is a fraction of one and therefore cannot be equal to or the same as one. This is basic math.
Basic? Is it basic because it involves understand infinity? (Also, 9/9 is a fraction.)
so if 1 - 0.000...01 = 1
then if i take a 0.000...01 part of cookie i got 0.9999...9 and 0.00000...001 cookie
which equals
to 1 and 0.0000...001 cookies
so if i will do that infinity times i will have infinity cookies from 1 cookie ?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/0.999... said:
In the last few decades, researchers of mathematics education have studied the reception of this equality among students. A great many question or reject the equality, at least initially. Many are swayed by textbooks, teachers and arithmetic reasoning as below to accept that the two are equal. However, they are often uneasy enough that they offer further justification. The students' reasoning for denying or affirming the equality is typically based on one of a few common erroneous intuitions about the real numbers; for example that each real number has a unique decimal expansion, that nonzero infinitesimal quantities should exist, or that the expansion of 0.999… eventually terminates.
To sum it up:
reasoning for denying the equality is based on erroneous intuitions, for example, that the expansion of 0.999… eventually terminates.


1/3 = 0.333... in base 10.
But in base 3, 1/3 = 0.1
0.1 multiplied by 3 (again in base 3) is equal to 1.
If you don't understand base numbers, then don't post.
 
Level 12
Joined
Aug 18, 2006
Messages
1,193
1/3 = 0.333... in base 10.
But in base 3, 1/3 = 0.1
0.1 multiplied by 3 (again in base 3) is equal to 1.
If you don't understand base numbers, then don't post.
now, i might now understand, since i dont calculate math in english, but

are you saying 0.3 x 3 is equal to 1?

anyway, there is a better way of making 10/3 = 3.33(not infinite amount of 3s, but maybe not just 2)

lets say, i have a birthday cake in vanilla(not hardened, like its been on the floor for 6 weeks)

now, if i divide the cake into 3 parts with a kitchen knife, parts of the cake will still remain on the knife. It doesnt matter what instrument i use, same thing will still happend. I know its a bad example, but combining math with physics is just funnier to do :p
 
Level 27
Joined
May 30, 2007
Messages
2,872
now, i might now understand, since i dont calculate math in english, but

are you saying 0.3 x 3 is equal to 1?
No.
anyway, there is a better way of making 10/3 = 3.33(not infinite amount of 3s, but maybe not just 2)
It DOES go on forever, do the long division, you always have a remainder of 1 that must be divided.
lets say, i have a birthday cake in vanilla(not hardened, like its been on the floor for 6 weeks)

now, if i divide the cake into 3 parts with a kitchen knife, parts of the cake will still remain on the knife. It doesnt matter what instrument i use, same thing will still happend. I know its a bad example, but combining math with physics is just funnier to do :p
So you are using an imperfect tool to divide?
 
Level 12
Joined
Aug 18, 2006
Messages
1,193
Okay, i just read a big bit of the wiki page Hakeem

You are saying, that 1 / 3 = 0.333~

and 0.333~ x 3 is equal to 0.999~

so, therefore, 1 = 0.999~

am i correct?

and frankly, those "wikipedia geniuses" might know alot, but they sure have their flaws. They have said, that in an algebraic way, this is possible

they say, that (0 / 0) x 1 = (0 / 0) x 2 which leads to 1 = 2 (since i can remove the (0 / 0) on both sides)

now, they dont seem to know that 0 / 0 = 1 since A / A = 1 and if A = 0, then 0 / 0 = 1 must be true, correct?

and 1 x 1 cannot be the same as 1 x 2
 
Level 15
Joined
Nov 1, 2004
Messages
1,058
TELL IT TO THEM!

0/0 is not zero, nor infinity, nor any defined value. It is called an indeterminate form and it is inherently undefined. While some other forms can be reduced to an evaluable limit using a technique such as l'Hospital's rule, 0/0 itself cannot.

So
(0 / 0) x 1 = (0 / 0) x 2
is not a valid equality.
One undefined expression != another undefined expression.
 
Level 9
Joined
Oct 15, 2006
Messages
339
Mathematically, they are equivilent for all practical purposes.

This i have come to agree with. I gave an example of 0.999~ being practical, and i still had one molecule!

If you take WILLTHEALMIGHTY's avatar, and image the very center being a molecule. Now imagine it getting smaller and smaller, everything around it seems to be getting bigger and bigger. But no matter how small it gets, in comparison to our relationship to the molecule as obervers, meaning we are moving with it, it's still the same. Not only is it the same but it won't ever go away. It's just there; ONE molecule.
Of course it's getting smaller and smaller, but with a practical use for the math, and math is ONLY practical because we apply it to matter, it CAN be ACCEPTED as the same as one.

Used in math for the sake of math it cannot be acepted as one (1). Used for a practical purpose of relating it to matter, or even the idea of a material situation, it can be accepted as one (1).

On the flip-side, my example of an infintely shrinking molecule does not incorporate the idea of a given one (1) to compare an infinitely shrinking molecule to. Meaning, i give no mention of a base for the original mass of a molecule AS one (1).

So... damn. I mean, i think if you compared an infinitely shinking molecule to a base mass of an original molecule, it still isn't practical to be used as one in a mathematical situation - because the mass of the fractioned molecule is still obviously smaller than the base mass.

I used a practical situation where the infinity IS one because it exists as something, but compared to a base mass it cannot be equal to it.

My opinion, and my conclusion is that it can be CONSIDERED one (1) in a practical situation. The philosophy then becomes finding a practical situation.

EDIT:

A way of EXPLAINING 0/0 in a practical sense to convey the message of how impossible it is is by substituting the zeros with either the idea of "nothingness" or "infinity".
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top