"Wow, she must really like maths."
"Wow, she must really like maths."
Congrats, your girlfriend is imaginary.
124ReplyThis meme become even better
31Reply
Is this an I, or a hint that her feelings are complex?
42ReplyImaginary feelings
35ReplyShe misses the imaginary root.
9ReplyComplex relationship
4Reply
j miss you :^)
32ReplyMaths, not engineering!
17Replyi will always be current. j will always be the square root of -1. Nothing will ever override this in my brain
13Reply
I don’t remember nearly enough science stuff to get most of the jokes here. Oh well.
20ReplyIf I'm not wrong, I think the square root of minus 1 is an imaginary number which is represented by i
Don't ask me anymore questions about this if you want real answers because I genuinely don't know any more.
24ReplyYep, sqrt(-1) = i. Powers of i are actually really neat imo since they form a loop: i^0 = 1
i^1 = i
i^2 = -1
i^3 (or i^2 x i or -1 x i) = -i
Now the loop starts:
i^4 = i^2 x i^2 = 1 x 1 = 1
i^5 = i^4 x i^1 = 1 x i = i
etc
Any evaluation of i to the power k boils down to i^(k%4). For example, i^726 = i^2 = -1. I know this was super useful in calc 1 or 2 and not used for any of my other math classes, it's just a fun concept to me 19ReplyOkay, that’s a deal. And thanks!
6Reply
this guy and his imaginary girlfriend. He sure has a complex relationship
19ReplyShe really did miss him with that one.
18ReplyIt's not even capital i
7ReplyMaybe
∫0M r2 dM
Would work better?
2Reply
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14ReplyImaginary girlfriend lmao
12ReplyKept reading that as iota. "I ought to" miss you
7ReplyAs my math teacher said:
Ich ziehe meine Wurzel aus einer Unbekannten.
Sorry, I don't think this works when translated.
7ReplyI pull up the root of an unknown.
4ReplyMeaning a: I take the root of a variable
Meaning b: I pull my "root" out of an unkown woman
4Reply
Ich kenn den anders. Wahre Mathematik ist es, wenn man schon morgens seine Wurzel aus einer Unbekannten zieht xD
2Reply
U R my number -eiπ
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2Reply
Reading the comments here made me think about this!
2ReplyI don't really like this syntax. √ should be used on positive reals only
That's my take, change my mind
1ReplyRead the room Buddy, I'm talking about syntax. You can write i²=-1, but not use √ on complex or negative reals
Btw this is a statesian website, we all know the US has terrible maths syntax and conventions
1Reply
Math Miss You
1Reply