| Hectamatatortron Member Level: 35 Posts: 21/232 EXP: 258005 For next: 21931 Since: 09-19-07 Since last post: 7.2 years Last activity: 5.3 years |
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| My ARM floating point functions say that infinity + (positive number) = infinity. I followed the 754 standard, it has to be right! D: Unfortunately, they also say that infinity - infinity = NaN. >.> Also, 4! = 4*(next integer closest to one, repeat until *1) So -1! could possibly maybe be -1*0*1 = 0? 0 = 42? 0*43/32 = 42*43/42? -1 = 42? I found a better one, though. Someone actually thought this was one of the valid proofs that 1 = .999... Yes, 1 does = .999..., but this is not why: 10x = 9.99999999... Presume x = .9999... 10x-x = 9.999... - .999... 9x = 9 x = 1 = .999...; x = .999... is a valid solution. But then wouldn't that mean that 10x = 9.5 x = .5 = 1, for x = (rvalue - (lvalue - x), as demonstrated by the previous proof? |




