Re 24: gosper.org/24throot.pdf DanA>Espcially l and 1 look so similar that I never use lowercase L, and hate to encounter it, in math writing. When I really want to use a non-capital L — typically when giving a talk — I like a scriptish L, like this if it survives e-mail: ℓ ("Script small L" on my Mac). --Dan Amazingly, something xmission.com didn't trash. I wonder why Mathematica doesn't use a less ambiguous font. (And in case you wondered, In[126]:= EntityValue[Entity["Planet", "Earth"], EntityProperty["Planet", "AverageDistanceFromEarth"]] Out[126]= Quantity[0, "AstronomicalUnit"] ) We should also look out for 314th anniversaries of significant things. (picentennials). If we just miss one, "Well, the *real* picentennial is the 314.159th anniversary..." On 2015-03-03 22:13, James Propp wrote:
Too bad nobody noticed on May 8, 1732 that it was the perfect Big-endian day to celebrate the square root of three (1732-05-08).
Jim Propp
On Tuesday, March 3, 2015, Adam P. Goucher <apgoucher@gmx.com> wrote:
No, but I'd like to bemoan the horror that is middle-Endian date formats.
I so prefer to write dates as 2015-03-14.
Sent: Wednesday, March 04, 2015 at 2:45 AM From: meekerdb <meekerdb@verizon.net <javascript:;>> To: math-fun <math-fun@mailman.xmission.com <javascript:;>> Subject: [math-fun] pi
The ultimate pi day, 3/14/15, of the century is only a little over a week away. Any good recipes you'd like to share?
Brent
In[153]:= NestList[Re[#-I*E^(I*#)]&,3`69,5] Out[153]= {3.00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000, 3.14112000805986722210074480280811027984693326425226558415188264123242, 3.1415926535721955587348885681408797467429928172149979247077932412017, 3.1415926535897932384626433832795019759271524572209636148541798880229, 3.1415926535897932384626433832795028841971693993751058209749445923078, 3.1415926535897932384626433832795028841971693993751058209749445923078} Hmm, that looks pretty Tweetable. \--rwg