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Cool math fact

@ForumMathSolver said in #19:

Some cool facts about Math and statistics:

  1. In the US over 90% of married people were married on their wedding day
  2. In India life leads to death 100% of the time. Together we can stop this.
  3. Statistically, 50% of the Africans are half of all Africans
  4. 100% of the dogs are actually not cats
  5. Over 99% of the world population was born
  6. The fastest truck in the world is actually faster than the rest of trucks.
  7. In Asia, dead people are less likely to be killed

And for some reason I actually thought ForumMathSolver was going to post something extremely math related.

@Avyaanagra said in #20:

SHUT DA **** UP YOU SON OF A *****

Dude, chillax.

@ForumMathSolver said in #19: > Some cool facts about Math and statistics: > 1. In the US over 90% of married people were married on their wedding day > 2. In India life leads to death 100% of the time. Together we can stop this. > 3. Statistically, 50% of the Africans are half of all Africans > 4. 100% of the dogs are actually not cats > 5. Over 99% of the world population was born > 6. The fastest truck in the world is actually faster than the rest of trucks. > 7. In Asia, dead people are less likely to be killed And for some reason I actually thought ForumMathSolver was going to post something extremely math related. @Avyaanagra said in #20: > SHUT DA **** UP YOU SON OF A ***** Dude, chillax.

HOW DA **** AM I SUPPOSED TO CHILL HE LITERALLY ROASTED A BILLION PEOPLE (EVEN ME)

HOW DA **** AM I SUPPOSED TO CHILL HE LITERALLY ROASTED A BILLION PEOPLE (EVEN ME)

also womp womp you violated terms of service

also womp womp you violated terms of service

@ajfang said in #22:

And for some reason I actually thought ForumMathSolver was going to post something extremely math related.
I'm sorry :( @Avyaanagra:

  1. 987654321 divided by 123456789 is nearly equal to 8 (about 8.000000073)

  2. The most efficient method for finding the value of pi was found out by Isaac Newton while experimenting with Integration and his newfound Binomial Theorem for fractional and negative powers. He integrated a part of the curve x^2 + y^2 = 1 and compared it with the known area of a part of a circle. The result was an infinite series that could calculate pi much faster than prev methods. 50 terms of the series computed pi to a furthur decimal place than the last attempt using polygons.

  3. Euler's number (e), roughly equal to 2.718, is used widely in logarithms and other functions. Definitions aside, interestingly, Euler's number can be said to be the positive real number that gives the maximum value when taken to the power of the reciprocal of itself. In other words, the maximum value of x^(1/x) is about 1.44, when x = e.

  4. No odd perfect numbers are known to exist, calculating with brute force to about 10^22. Perfect numbers are numbers whose factors (apart from itself) add up to it. For instance, 28 is a perfect number as factors of 28 = 1 + 2 + 4 + 7 + 14 = 28.

@ajfang said in #22: > And for some reason I actually thought ForumMathSolver was going to post something extremely math related. I'm sorry :( @Avyaanagra: 1. 987654321 divided by 123456789 is nearly equal to 8 (about 8.000000073) 2. The most efficient method for finding the value of pi was found out by Isaac Newton while experimenting with Integration and his newfound Binomial Theorem for fractional and negative powers. He integrated a part of the curve x^2 + y^2 = 1 and compared it with the known area of a part of a circle. The result was an infinite series that could calculate pi much faster than prev methods. 50 terms of the series computed pi to a furthur decimal place than the last attempt using polygons. 3. Euler's number (e), roughly equal to 2.718, is used widely in logarithms and other functions. Definitions aside, interestingly, Euler's number can be said to be the positive real number that gives the maximum value when taken to the power of the reciprocal of itself. In other words, the maximum value of x^(1/x) is about 1.44, when x = e. 4. No odd perfect numbers are known to exist, calculating with brute force to about 10^22. Perfect numbers are numbers whose factors (apart from itself) add up to it. For instance, 28 is a perfect number as factors of 28 = 1 + 2 + 4 + 7 + 14 = 28.

thanks but im in 4th grade so how am i supposed to know this stuff

thanks but im in 4th grade so how am i supposed to know this stuff

@ForumMathSolver said in #19:

Some cool facts about Math and statistics:

  1. In the US over 90% of married people were married on their wedding day
  2. In India life leads to death 100% of the time. Together we can stop this.
  3. Statistically, 50% of the Africans are half of all Africans
  4. 100% of the dogs are actually not cats
  5. Over 99% of the world population was born
  6. The fastest truck in the world is actually faster than the rest of trucks.
  7. In Asia, dead people are less likely to be killed
    This is nonsense man stop it
@ForumMathSolver said in #19: > Some cool facts about Math and statistics: > 1. In the US over 90% of married people were married on their wedding day > 2. In India life leads to death 100% of the time. Together we can stop this. > 3. Statistically, 50% of the Africans are half of all Africans > 4. 100% of the dogs are actually not cats > 5. Over 99% of the world population was born > 6. The fastest truck in the world is actually faster than the rest of trucks. > 7. In Asia, dead people are less likely to be killed This is nonsense man stop it
<Comment deleted by user>

@Avyaanagra said in #24:

also womp womp you violated terms of service

I didn't need you to tell me that.
DID YOU EVEN READ MY PROFILE?

@Avyaanagra said in #24: > also womp womp you violated terms of service I didn't need you to tell me that. DID YOU EVEN READ MY PROFILE?

@tpr said in #18:

Pick any natural number, e.g. 13
Multiply by 3 and add 1: 133 + 1 = 40
If it is even, divide by 2 and repeat until it is odd. 40 / 2 = 20, 20 / 2 = 10, 10 / 2 = 5
Repeat the process 5
3 + 1 = 16
16 / 2 = 8, 8 / 2 = 4, 4 / 2 = 2, 2 / 2 = 1
The sequence always ends at 1.
This is also known as the Collatz Conjecture. Go to this link for further details courtsy of Veritasium. https://www.veritasium.com/videos/2021/7/30/the-simplest-math-problem-no-one-can-solve

@tpr said in #18: > Pick any natural number, e.g. 13 > Multiply by 3 and add 1: 13*3 + 1 = 40 > If it is even, divide by 2 and repeat until it is odd. 40 / 2 = 20, 20 / 2 = 10, 10 / 2 = 5 > Repeat the process 5*3 + 1 = 16 > 16 / 2 = 8, 8 / 2 = 4, 4 / 2 = 2, 2 / 2 = 1 > The sequence always ends at 1. This is also known as the Collatz Conjecture. Go to this link for further details courtsy of Veritasium. https://www.veritasium.com/videos/2021/7/30/the-simplest-math-problem-no-one-can-solve

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