1378:, as, like me, his parents were Christian? I don't like this kind of categorization either; I think its basically some subtle political POV-pushing. May I suggest one possible cure: IF the person preached a religion (other than math) at one point in thier life, or published articles on faith (in newspapers, as letters to the editor, etc), THEN they may be classified by faith. However, if they had the bad luck of having Christian, or Jewish parents, that alone is not a reason to classify. I would insist on proof of religious activity before allowing classification.
1890:. For some technical reason, I've not included redirects in the count of articles. So these lists are the bests my little scripts can produce at the moment. If people feel the need, I'll try to update them to get closer to a real number. In the case of Stone–Weierstrass, I'd actually say the appearence in the list is a good thing. Looking closely, the hyphen in the article name is an odd unicode character (0xE28093) rather than a regular ascii hyphen (0x2D). I'd say this would be a good case for the article to be moved to the name with the ascii hyphen. --
5324:
40:
5195:". I was just replacing characters which I could not read with IE in those articles which I was trying to clean up for other reasons. alefsym causes the same problem as "ℵ" in IE. Also there is an element symbol which does not display correctly; and a proves symbol. Although these are rare. Oddly, I think that the actual Hebrew letter aleph works (at least I see the Hebrew letters OK in Google when I switch languages).
5263:
browers and fonts. Almost always the problem is with the fonts and browser settings. The
Unicode characters are here to stay, especially when BlahTeX generates MathML for Knowledge. A third issue is what appears in edit windows. The wiki software could be conservative and convert non-ASCII characters to named or numeric entities, but a browser that can display a page with Unicode characters can probably edit them as well.
4019:
corresponds to what we now view as transfinite numbers; and Indian mathematicians were so proud of their invention of the decimal system that they had fun writing very large numbers as cosmic cycles, and sometimes they confused them with infinity, but obviously this has nothing to do with the modern concept. I support any move toward removing the incriminated section. --
5253:
revert wars, we try to respect consensus and community guidelines. When you've been here a while, you get a stronger feeling for that. Now, obviously you feel that wikipedia has to conform to IE's capabilities. Maybe you should try to win people over to your view instead of fighting with them. At the moment, I'm on the fence, but about to fall on the other side. -
4911:
someone edits with one of those browsers, it will look like all the
Unicode characters in the article have suddenly disappeared. If the browser chooses to render "α" with a Unicode character, that's fine, but it doesn't mean that that Unicode character is somehow equivalent to the HTML entity -- they aren't. Hope that explains things a bit better...
4415:. I highly doubt that this is a copyright violation in any way, as while their lists may be copyrighted (the order of entries I guess :), individual items in the list are not, and after merging together the mathworld links and the springer links and removing the bluelinks, little if any resemblance is left to their orginal lists.
5243:
people". Most people use
Internet Explorer 6.02 or earlier. So most of our readers will not be able to read the characters in question. And remember, this is an encyclopedia for the general public, not a private domain for you and the other authors to glory in their own words. Do not worry, I will not edit your user pages.
1360:, where as far as I can see it does little. I didn't much like like classifying mathematicians by nationality, when it came in; but it was inevitable with the growth, and the issue of several nationalities has the solution of including all of them. There are problems with all such classifications, and I'm not keen on them.
3716:
Your suggestion is not silly. I think it would be important to emphasise in this petition that although some of his/her contributions have been appreciated, his/her almost complete disregard for other editors' opinions is not. I've spent enough time on this now; if someone else writes it, I will sign
3119:
to stop linking there. (Or maybe he/she is still at it.) I would think generally such papers do not qualify for linking from
Knowledge, unless there are very good reasons to the contrary. Somehow a link to the arXiv has an air of respectability that you don't get from your home page on geocities etc,
3092:
expansion of π seems to mean nothing to that person or to escape his notice altogether. The fact that this particular integral is so simple and has a neat pattern also seems to escape them. Another shows signs of thinking that all articles on π-related topics should get merged into one article (see
3395:
Obviously the list doesn't have any kind of official status, but it does create a kind of community, as well as crystallizing one's own role in the
Mathematics project in one's own mind. Mostly it seems sort of like the ritual of everyone gathering in a circle and placing hands one above another to
1437:
As far as I can tell, it's étalé here, and étale for morphisms. "éspace étalé" means roughly "slackened space", or "stretched-out space", which is reasonable given what it is, while an "étale morphism" is simply a "slack morphism". The metaphor is roughly the same, in that the slackness refers to a
5262:
Several distinct issues are at play. One is the recurring integration of novices into the community, with the usual exuberant misstep and jaded correction. A second is the display of the rich panoply of
Unicode characters, whether mathematical or otherwise, in articles as viewed with a diversity of
4668:
That's a bummer. Thanks for pointing this out. I looks like
Firefox is interpreting the "d" and "x" as belonging in separate "frames" and doesn't want to overlap them; therefore because the "d" is italicised and tall, it pushes the "x" to the right. I'm not totally sure about this, especially since
4370:
I would think it's probably worth an article (I never heard of it before this discussion, but we're not talking about something put up by some random hobbyist; this is
Springer). The issue is how to write a neutral review that's not original research. That's a problem to which I have not thought of
3166:
through the arxiv, he doesn't feel that journal referees are qualified to vet his papers. And there are précis on the arxiv which are very good resources but not original work, and therefore not appropriate for journals. But of course, there is also crackpottism on the arxiv, so care is certainly
1739:
I don't quite know, and for myself I would be fine with a mix. But if you find it stylistically ugly to have html mixed with LaTeX, then a better solution would be maybe to just convert the html to LaTeX right away, rather than put a "work needed" template on it and hoping that a kind soul would do
4868:
Well, I happen to use Lynx some times when I don't have access to a graphical browser, or (less often for me), when I use other operating systems I may use a browser that may not support
Unicode. I'm not saying that Unicode should be completely removed from articles, it just shouldn't be used when
4825:
I wonder what people think of a policy of changing unicode html tokens to tex tags in order to ensure compatibility with
Internet explorer browsers which apparently have problems with some unicode symbols. I guess compatibility with IE takes precedence over our own MoS guidelines, right? What do
4018:
I fully agree with your assessment. In fact, I'll go further: this is obvious crackpotism. Various ancient philosophers have made dubious or meaningless claims about infinity (I had found a quote by Aristotle stating that the number of grains of sands on a beach was "infinite"), but none of them
1332:
Being a jew does not, of course, make one religious, any more than being a christian makes one religious. So the categories' names do not imply that the mathematicians in question are religious - They just state to which religion they belong. And I think such categories are useful, in the same way
5205:
Why do novices constantly "fix" things that obviously are not broken for most people? If the Unicode characters are in the article, there is nothing wrong with the characters for the author, and presumably for most readers. Adjust your own browser, your fonts, your configuration. Common sense and
4723:
What programs would people around here recommend for making images to illustrate geometry and linear algebra concepts (and the like)? I'd like to manually input coordinates for vector arrows, line segments, points, etc., choose colors and line styles, and output the result to SVG. Eukleides looks
2037:
Yeah, I didn't like it at first, but after thinking about it (and looking at typeset documents) I have to agree. Not so much for the unique parsing, which is a good argument in principle but not so much in practice (you can't reliably conclude that Burali-Forti is a single person just because the
2026:
I knew we'd have to discuss this one eventually. The arguments for the A-endash-B theorem if A and B are two people are (a) it parses uniquely if you don't happen to be able to recognise double-barrelled names, and (b) it is a more professional piece of format. I would, however, always recommend
5431:
moved the article "Ruler-and-compass constructions" to "Compass and straightedge". As the article currently stands, I think there are problems with the new name. I intended to move the article back to its original name, until we can reach a consensus, but I inadvertently left out the hyphens and
5252:
Don't get defensive. KSmrq has a good point. We have a community here with established conventions. You can do whatever you like, make whatever decisions you want, decide what's the best format to use in articles, but we have the same rights, and in order to keep from devolving into continual
4910:
good computer systems should support ASCII, and the HTML entity consists of only ASCII characters, so no matter if you use a computer that supports Unicode or if you don't, the string will be unchanged. However, some browsers that don't support Unicode simply ignore the Unicode characters, so if
3697:
I have a silly suggestion. How about writing a petition on his user talk page, telling him that if he engages in any disruptive activity again, at any article, he will be blocked for 12 hours? Then we could all sign it, and then, should he disrupt again, any of us administrators would be able to
3161:
refereed references. Of course for journal references that are also on the arxiv, we should provide an arxiv link (not everyone has access to an academic library). Furthermore, there are worthwhile things on the arxiv which don't get published in journals. A lot of times, Witten, for example,
1295:
Anyway, I expect I've offended innumerable people one way or another. If I've put your favourite article somewhere you don't think it belongs, please don't hesitate to move it (hopefully not into the categories I've carefully emptied). If you dislike the entire new categorization, please don't
4424:
by completing incomplete entries (mathworld had those), putting things in lowercase, regularly removing the bluelinks, and providing links to google search and google books for each entry. Those lists can be rather good at suggesting new redirects, new articles, or judging where we are lacking.
4038:
Well, if it could be documented that the Jaina had the notion of equinumerosity (as witnessed by one-one matching), that would already be a step in the right direction, though I still don't think it would be enough to use the word "transfinite". As I understand it the historical context is that
3421:
Actually, I got into a discussion recently about how many particle physicists there are working in WP; looking at the participants list help put a lower bound on the number. This is a lot like any department directory or phonebook or census: rarely looked at, but terribly useful when its really
5242:
I have been editing here for about two months. I did not create a user page because I have no interest in talking about myself for the public. I have a User-talk page to communicate about our shared work here. You are wrong to say that these characters are "obviously are not broken for most
5136:
OK, when I reboot into Windows to look at this in IE, I just see a square for the ℵ character. This is in IE 6.0.2900.someothernumbers, SP2, WinXP Home Edition, Version 2002, SP2. I suppose to really figure out what's going on I should say what fonts I have installed, but there are too many to
2061:
Agreed. Some folks care as much about typographical niceties as mathematicians care about proof validity, or musicians care about pitch correctness. Lack of personal interest or awareness of these subtleties is no good excuse for hostility toward the interests of those who do care. Accents and
5300:
I know what we need. Here pages that use indic fonts include a template which indicates that they're being used and that if you want to view the page, you have to make sure your system is ready. If we want to use stuff in a math article which doesn't have widespread support, we could have a
2918:
I second Arthur's comments. Just in the past month or so, I've had to remove several external links to MathWorld because when I checked them out, I found out they contained major errors. Sometimes these MathWorld articles can be good, but other times, it looks like a real hack job. So it's
3775:
I wasted some time tracking down the paper to check the clearly wrong result before realising that it was the rendering rather than the text that was at fault. I don't know if this is a well known bug, but a brief search on Mediazilla didn't throw up any candidates. I have reported it to the
4007:
he has been making edits that attribute the concept to certain ancient Jaina mathematicians/philosophers. The evidence presented is, in my estimation, of the sort that would be accepted only by someone who either has an agenda, or who does not really understand the contemporary concept. I'd
2385:
On my suggestion, Salix alba made a list of Knowledge articles which are not categorized, but which are linked from a math article. That list has a bunch of false positives, but also articles which are math and are not categorized. I suggest we start a cat wiki-pet (short for a Categorizing
4638:
Essentially. Increasing the text size a few times doesn't change the absolute width (it stays at 3 pixels); it looks normal if I use an obscenely large font. By the way, the space gets one pixel narrower if I disable the page CSS style (but still looks too wide, though this could be in my
3668:. He/she also makes plenty of edits to articles in which I am not competent, especially relating to Japanese mathematicians and musicians. Therefore, in my opinion, a permanent block is not (yet) warranted, even given the fact that he/she was permanently blocked on the Japanese wikipedia.
2049:
Maybe someone could send a bot around to look for article names that are duplicates except for the hyphen-endash distinction (these should always redirect to the same place), and for articles with endashes with no corresponding hyphen redirects (redirects should be provided).
1438:
space constructed from layers laid out flat, and the grammatical difference distinguishes the "slackened space" constructed from something which was not, of itself, slack, from the "slack morphism", which is inherently so. Of course, "éspace étalé" is not used much anyway.
2204:) is being sorely tested. I know I'm not the only one who has wasted a lot of time over the past few weeks dealing with him/her. I'm wondering whether anyone else here has any thoughts about how to deal with WAREL, short of deploying an automatic WAREL-edit-reverting-bot.
4669:
there's a one pixel overlap in your second example, but that could just be some rendering thing that happens after the frames have been positioned. I will put it on my list of bugs to pursue; it's probably something that the Firefox folks will need to deal with.
2781:. I'm not sure what their license model is, but I can only assume that this is the reason why it's not popular around here? Please let me know if you think including their articles as references is a desirable thing. I'm watching this page, so do reply here. -
1693:
template on articles which are properly formatted, but only in HTML. Of course, one may use this template for articles which have no formatting whatsoever, like people writiting x_2 or x2 without bothering to use proper markup or math tags. That's what I would
4219:
Yes, and its pretty good too, at least for the 3-4 articles I looked at. I created a template fr this, which may be usd as the following (for example:) {{springer|id=f/f041440|title=Fredholm kernel|author=B.V. Khvedelidze, G.L. Litvinov}} which results
3144:
That's not how it works in mathematics research, and I see no reason why Knowledge should adopt stricter rules for citations in its mathematics articles than most of the mathematics community itself. Knowledge would only be shooting itself in the foot.
2370:
article and subject. But currently it could probably do with a mathematicans eye (alongside a few more things as well). Essentially, is there a neater or nicer way of doing the table at the bottom as an example of how the index is generated? Cheers,
2869:
Just to clear up a possible misunderstanding: I was referring to the license model because Planet Math is more frequently linked to. Is quality really so divergent between the two? I'm not trained as a mathematician, so I admit my judgement is poor. -
5286:
Which leads to a design question: Is there anything we can do to head off these edits before they occur? The insert menu already shows a large assortment of non-ASCII characters, but obviously that's not enough of a hint to some editors. Should
2846:
Yeah, making it a policy to link to mathworld does not make sense, but I would think we should be encouraged in making external links to mathwolrd on case-by-case basis when those links are relevant (not necessarily much stronger than ours :)
2513:
I made the sections be 20 items rather than 50, as those were too big I think. To continue with the note at the top of this section, the person who does most work will get a cat as a wiki-pet (the Wikipet which anybody can touch (and edit)).
4836:
We shouldn't use Unicode gratuitously in articles anyway. Unicode is far from being a ubiquitous standard, and when someone tries to edit in something that isn't Unicode capable, it screws up the entire article. That's not good behaviour.
3071:
2389:
I split the list into 47 sections of 50 articles each. One may choose a section to work on, and sign at the bottom when done. I did the first three, and found roughly 3-5 articles out of 50 which may need categorizing. See the list at
4400:
They have a lot of great articles. They're beating us in a lot of areas, and already kick the crap out of mathworld (soon it'll be time to put mathworld out of its misery). However, have you seen their diagrams? Complete garbage!
2720:"History of pi" deserves an article. To think that a table of the history of numerical computation of pi is the same thing as a history of pi is very silly. I've moved the table to another article, and labeled this article a stub.
4849:
Changing unicode to LaTeX may be a huge amount of work, and may yield expressions which are a mix of both html and TeX. It would be fine I think if people do it on a case by case basis, but I would not be sure about making that a
1965:
I think I would strongly oppose that policy, on ground of human nature. Most editors will use the ascii hyphen, never get to see the policy on ndashes, leading to the same redirecting problems we have seen on Stone–Weierstrass.
4028:
It is no more (and no less) nonsense than Galileo's work on infinite numbers, in which he found that the natural numbers were equinumerous with a subset (the set of squares) and recoiled in horror. It is not the transfinites.
4947:
as a standard. The world has gone Unicode, and that includes even standards-flouting Microsoft. To the best of my knowledge, all contemporary browsers can display Unicode characters if configured with adequate fonts. Usually
4869:
there are other more portable equivalents out there that won't be mangled if someone edits with something that's not Unicode compatible. For example, one shouldn't just use a Unicode alpha when an α will be just as suitable.
5046:
Doesn't work for me, either. I certainly prefer ℵ, regardless, as it's difficult to distinguish ℵ from the Hebrew letter by inspection if they were in Unicode, and those may display differently on different browsers. —
4853:
To comment on Dysprosia's comment, Unicode is a fact of life on Knowledge given interlanguage links and foreign names/words. Luckily not that many browsers screw Unicode anymore, maybe just Lynx or really old browsers.
3377:
Let me also add, feel free not to add yourself to that list or any others, for any reason. I myself don't see what purpose the list serves, and don't like adding myself to lists like that, though I did so eventually.
3328:
I meant to sign up at some point, but I glanced over the list and, frankly, many of you guys seem to be so good that it's kind of scary (I'm only an undergrad student) :-) - only half joking. But now, if you say so...
2176:
4198:
the most up-to-date and comprehensive English-language graduate-level reference work in the field of mathematics today. This online edition comprises more than 8,000 entries and illuminates nearly 50,000 notions in
4174:, it appears that in a context like this, appearing before a consonant, it would typically be omitted. Knowledge allows us to choose that one as primary, for the article name, and use redirects for the variants. --
2662:
Cheaters!!!! Hey, I noticed that some of the "finished" sections are still contain uncategorized articles. Even if the article is not about math, please do make an effort to put it into some category, somewhere!!!
2105:
It was nominated for deletion by those who did not understand it. To some extent, they did not understand it because it was a stub and failed to explain what audience it was intended for and what its purpose was.
5146:
It's probably not a font issue, since if you try another browser on the same system, it will display. It's an IE issue. Now the question is, do we want to replace inline HTML token/UTF-8 with tex to support IE?
2270:
This isn't about mathematics, but it is about a mathematician. Anybody who has spare time and is willing to read a long talk page is kindly request to comment on the dispute regarding al-Khwarizmi's etnicity at
2919:
definitely not good to just unilaterally add the MathWorld links. I think it best for editors working on particular articles in their area of knowledge to add the links they actually found the most useful. --
1317:. I would think that being Jewish does not necessarily mean being religious. And do we actually need to categorize mathematicians on whether they were relegious, and if yes, what relegion they were practicing?
4076:
A section reviewing the general history of eastern and western ideas about infinity, including Aristotle's ideas, as well as Gaileo's shock, would not be out of place somwhere on WP. We do, after all, have
2940:
2046:
notice the difference in the length of the dash/hyphen, which I wouldn't have if it hadn't been pointed out). But the endashes really do make the title look more like typeset documents and less like Usenet.
5282:
shows slightly over 50% IE6 users, so it would seem reasonable to assume that many people had viewed any given Knowledge article in IE6 without complaint. Yet these editors inexplicably fail to draw that
4896:
Oh, I see. But uh, don't the web browsers render the HTML tokens with unicode? I thought they did, and so therefore HTML tokens and UTF-8 text are equivalent (for viewing purposes). Or am I mistaken?
2733:
Agree w/Michael. I remember reading, as a young student, of plenty of interesting snippets about Egyptians knotting strings, silly legislation in kansas about pi=3, and what not. It deserves an article.
4460:
I've looked things up in the library's copy one or two times; good to see I don't have to go all the way there now... :-) Anyone know if the online edition differs significantly from the one in print?
5278:
of it shows missing characters, especially when the same character appears in many articles. Do they think everyone else is stupid or blind? I don't know the statistics for Knowledge readers, but one
1799:
The top linked articles might be useful for directing our efforts as these are probably most visited pages. The orphaned articles and redirects could help with some housekeeping. For example there is
63:
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4981:
inline and display mode alike. I didn't like it, but apparently IE doesn't display ℵ correctly even if you have a font for it (which we learned because it displays if he changes web browser). -
2156:
the appropriate place to try to learn what mathematical induction is or how to use it, with a link to the appropriate article for that. It explains that you need to know mathematical induction
4055:
limit. That last sentence may be a bit of retrospective etymology on my part, but I think it really is the basic idea, whether or not Cantor had that specific etymological reasoning in mind. --
2558:
Now, I eager to get the wiki-pet, reviewed a section, categorized around 10 of the 20 there, felt good of myself, and when I got to editing the section to say "done", I see the section was
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HTML converter. It has to do with HTML tidy, which is a program that processes the HTML after the converter is done with it. The correct translation would be something like 2<sup: -->
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JA: I'm sure I was directed to do that by some WikiPundit or other -- I just assumed it was to mark an obvious logical distinction for the sake of better hyper-indexing or sumting.
4846:
When I work on my Windows laptop I don't see some Unicode characters on Knowledge, even though I use Firefox and not IE. I guess it is a problem of missing fonts more than browser.
4143:
or Drinfeld? We should be consistent: and preferably across all references to them in WP. (In both cases we currently use the apostrophe sometimes, but far from consistently.) —
1333:
that categories of mathematicians by nationality are useful. But obviously, additional categories for other religions, not just judaism, are in order for it to be meaningful. --
5071:
I do not see the point of distinguishing ℵ from the Hebrew letter. Next we will be wanting an α different from alpha. I'm using a computer in the same cluster; both ℵ and ℵ now
3111:
So what's the deal with linking to the arxiv? This has come up quite a number of times in the last little while. Someone has gone trigger-happy recently on some papers there by
3871:
Yes, that's the Tidy I mean. There is a flag $ wgUseTidy in the mediawiki source which enables use of HTML Tidy. I'm pretty sure they use it on WP itself. You could try asking
2477:, so more people will see them and may refine the categorization further. So yes, marking a section as done if the articles there are listed in some category is good, thanks.
1649:
3941:) but I guess that's redundant now. (I also followed up with a "never mind" to my wikitech mail, so it may never get through to the list.) I look forward to the new version.
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I'm saying that ℵ should work on IE, that is, it should actually display. It shouldn't matter that much that it "looks different". I don't have IE so I can't check this.
5037:
Are you saying that ℵ displays differently from ℵ in IE? Septentrionalis told me once that he couldn't see ℵ correctly (I don't know for sure what setup he was using). --
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quotation marks are another common battleground. With redirection, there is no need to fight. The hypen-redirects-to-dash idea seems like a reasonable compromise. --
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JA: I thought we were standardizing the use of ndashes, not hyphens, for conjoining names of distinct people, as distinguished from hyphenated names of one person.
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needed. That, and indeed, the community feeling of the historical "I was here" thing. In 20 years, the list may be interesting to review: "I remember old so-n-so."
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formatting. My concern is that it uses the LaTeX logo, which may or may not be a problem. The image was created using LaTeX, and using LaTeX to create images like
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Somebody likes m-dashes and n-dashes, hardcoded by use of — and – and goes through substituting them. I'm not sure why; portability, maybe?
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The arXiv is mostly reliable, except for the general mathematics (GM) section which is where the crank articles seem to get listed. I removed all the links to
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bugs database, and saw no related item there.) If not, can you point me at some details of the HTML tidy you mean? I'd like to track this problem further ...
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hesitate to argue with me about it. Though I can't imagine I've made things worse, since everything was categorized more or less at random to begin with. —
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in French, but this leaves open the question of what the English translation of this expression is. I had been under the impression that it was called the
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I agree with Arthur and the reasons he provides. A policy of providing links to mathworld just doesn't make sense for us. However, if you come across a
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comprehensible to ordinary non-mathematicians, even those who know --- say --- secondary-school algebra, but have never heard of mathematical induction,
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Should a page use a combination of LaTeX and HTML formatting, or should its use be consistent throughout an entire article? I have tagged sections with
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In fact, formulas which become PNG images may actually be preferrable in HTML, as then they show up as text, and look better on the page, also per the
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Indeed, I do know about it. This is fixed in the current version of HTML Tidy, but that is not yet installed on the MediaWiki servers. Details are in
1544:, currently a disambiguation page with little value. Despite the title, said article covers the concept of elementary functions in the general sense.
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Well, I haven't seen these improvements in article names; only in text. But there does seem to be a tendency to avoid hyphenated article titles:
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Yes, I understand now. UTF-8 text will get lost in the edit box by some browsers, even though it renders the same. Thank you for explaining. -
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The difference is that the Unicode alpha is just another character in the text, like "t", or "q". The HTML entity is the string "α".
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and the topic of infinity, just like the question "what is four dimensions", was a legit intellectual excercise over the millenia. No doubt
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doesn't seem to be a problem; yet, the image is still a logo with questionable copyright status. I was wondering what everyone else thought?
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You definitely need a lot of care when citing papers by a guy who "doesn't feel that journal referees are qualified to vet his papers". :)
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A bunch of (mostly) non-mathematicians looking at the stub form in which the article appeared when it was nominated from deletion saw that
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I don't understand your example. Isn't that a unicode alpha that you've displayed? We shouldn't use unicode when unicode will suffice? -
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article where they have a much stronger version, then certainly linking to theirs would be useful (even better: bring ours up to snuff). -
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we're talking about? Because if so I'm surprised there's no mention there that it is being used on WP. (I also had a quick browse of the
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was born 17th Feb 2006. He/she has a total of 242 edits since then. The following survey includes 99 of those edits (41%), plus a few of
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alefsym definitely looks better alongside roman text than a Hewbrew aleph. The Hebrew aleph is too big. Do you not also find it so? -
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Actually, I will send Springer an email asking if they mind using their list as a resource for our redlinks list. Just to be safe. :)
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1273:. (Putting "puzzles" as a subcat of "recreational mathematics", as suggested on one talk page, isn't really an option: there are a
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3904:. I haven't yet seen your post to the mailing list (perhaps it's help up in a queue), but the solution is to upgrade HTML Tidy. --
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On the other hand, I note that WAREL has also made several nontrivial, non-reverted contributions to several mathematics articles:
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00:20, 18 March 2006 (UTC) And after signing up, I see that my nick and the alphabetical ordering puts me on top of the list :-D
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which seems quite dubious, and there are several highly linked redirects which indicate a need for some topics to be expanded. --
3463:: 23 edits. At least 13 immediately reverted. Many prior edits by DYLAN LENNON going back to July 2005 -- generally not reverted
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4737:. May be more. Of course, Matlab costs money, but should be available at any university, if you are in academia. Here are some
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Cantor didn't want to use the word "infinite" because he was talking about things that were not absolutely infinite. They were
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The delete votes seem to be from non-mathematicians who erroneously think they understand the article. The main idea is this:
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I think it would simplify a few links and a line could be added to the article pointing to the list of common functions. When
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Perhaps people should mark their territory -- in a nice way -- at the top of the score of items when they start work on it?
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1744:, and I think that labeling an article as needing work because of TeX/HTML inconsistency would be probably not good. Cheers,
1599:. It might be useful to have more input. The question is whether it should be defined initially in terms of rings or fields.
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MathWorld articles is probably the uneven quality (yes, even by our standards) and the presence of clear errors (possible
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Sometimes one can pick the right category by looking at the articles going from the current one. But yes, putting them in
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That is also my opinion, but do we not have an obligation to lower our standards to support IE? Some might say we do. -
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If you have this talk page on your watchlist, then you should add your name, field(s) of expertise and interests to the
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Matlab gives you complete control, 3D, and output to color EPS. Here is a (free) program which it seems outputs to svg
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creating ]'' first, as a precaution, so as to pick up any hungry red links; and only then move to the endash version.
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control so you see as few missing characters as possible. (Note: For me, none are missing. Again, I highly recommend
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Somehow I doubt that most persons involved are interested in updating his biography beyond the first two sentences. —
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graph of it. That said, it'd be worth copying the index into a new article or added to the missing science topics.
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page! I know there are some newcomers who haven't yet signed up, and I suspect there are some old-timers as well.
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but it's not deserved, and we shouldn't be misleading people into thinking that the arXiv is a reliable resource.
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I wonder about the correctness of these lists. I was browsing the "orphaned" list and I was very surprised to see
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Replacing Unicode would be bad policy. This question was already decided when the wiki software switched over to
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I suspect many of the referees would agree, and are probably relieved that they do not have to try to keep up! --
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Two examples of part of the article that is probably hardest to understand to those who haven't seen these ideas.
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See what reviews it has in the scholarly press. Scholar.google.com should have something (this should solve the
2230:(Link to today's version, as WAREL likes to delete things he does not like. See especially the bottom section.)
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4170:("ь")—which does not so much represent a sound as a modification—is problematic, and conventions vary. But for
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Knowledge:Articles_for_deletion/Proof_that_22_over_7_exceeds_π#.5B.5BProof_that_22_over_7_exceeds_.CF.80.5D.5D
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I was wondering why I can find so many maths-related articles here that do not reference relevant pages from
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Thanks for your input! I'll keep it in mind in the future. What is your opinion on the logo used in the tag?
5399:. Similarly, a few special fractions have Unicode points, while most do not. For example, compare ¾ (entity
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and seems to live up to its description. It seems like this could be a useful resouces for many articles. --
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5440:. I will volunteer to make any necessary changes after we arrive at a consensus about what to do. Thanks —
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well (and almost identically) in this IE set-up, but the second is a little square box in the edit window.
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But the article also includes exposition, discussion, and mention of the appearance of this problem in the
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I don't understand what you're talking about. If you want an aleph, you have ℵ, which actually does work.
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Next thing you build your own rocket in your backyard, and could as well write your own encyclopedia. :)
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dies. This is just a theory, but I'm pretty sure that texvc gets the conversion right in the first place.
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Only a few superscript characters have Unicode points, so consistency weighs in favor of the <sup: -->
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Um, I don't actually know french, but I thought only the first "e" in "etale" had an acute accent. So is
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relevant sections of MathWorld articles, as that would be a copyright violation. The reason for not
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none of the springer links seems to work. how does one get to it from the springer website? thanks.
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2706:. Even I think this is pædantry, so it may be over the top. Can we discuss this here, away from the
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and to the movable, marked carpenter's square. Is the use of these tools not equivalent to neusis?
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and assumes that the author forgot the slash. So it inserts an extra slash producing 2<sup: -->
2413:, is that enough to get them on the radar? (i.e. should I mark a section as "done" if I do this?)
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Of these 113 edits, there are at least 88 reversions, which is 78% of the edits listed above, or
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After a check in the "Annales de l'Ecole Normale Supérieure", the good term is "espace étalé". --
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template like that one. That would probably keep new editors from changing font stuff, right? -
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Which browser+version are you using? This was a known problem with earlier versions of Firefox.
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dear reader, for a more complete view of the status of the discussion, please do have a look at
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dear reader, for a more complete view of the status of the discussion, please do have a look at
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4003:, whom you may recognize as being interested in the contribution of Indian mathematicians. At
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Knowledge:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents#Disruptive_contributor to_mathematics articles
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You could learn a scripting language and roll your own tool. It shouldn't be that difficult.
3066:{\displaystyle 0<\int _{0}^{1}{\frac {x^{4}(1-x)^{4}}{1+x^{2}}}\,dx={\frac {22}{7}}-\pi .}
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Without rendering support, you may see irregular vowel positioning and a lack of conjuncts.
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I submit the following statistics as an argument to block WAREL for, I suppose, a few days.
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2182:(Nothing like nomination for deletion to get you to work on a long-neglected stub article!)
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3645:, many of whom you will recognise as being respected contributors to mathematics articles.
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One "delete"-voter says this is no more significant than, for example, a proof that π : -->
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when the section in question deviated from the precendent set by the rest of the article.
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I brought this up because some user went on a crusade to replace all instances of ℵ with
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article. It is argued by some parties that it should be a disambig. Comments welcome at
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5494:. He shows a few methods using forbidden tools; I call your attention to the so-called
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No, you can't do that; this came up before with MathWorld. It's a copyright violation.
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I don't know much about the category system, but if I just tag relevant articles with
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In the last six months, I have found there a paper proving P=NP and another proving P
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No, it's a HTML entity, edit the section and have a look: α renders as α.
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Oleg, you are SO going to award it to yourself. That is, like, so totally not fair.
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User_talk:Jon_Awbrey#En-Dash_Protocol_Reigning_Over_Polynominal_Titles_.28EDPROPT.29
2016:
User_talk:Jon_Awbrey#En-Dash_Protocol_Reigning_Over_Polynominal_Titles_.28EDPROPT.29
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it some time. There is a huge amount of articles needing serious work, as listed at
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which is quite good for 3D maths and is free as in beer but not speach. Also see
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I think in this context, it's correct: the term in Hartshorne is "éspace étalé".
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much faster PNG output, because we're using dvipng rather than dvips/imagemagick
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2450:. Just make sure to remember the "mathematical" before "analysis" or "logic". --
2168:
I did these recent de-stubbing edits, to reconsider their votes in light of the
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seal a pact. And I'd encourage AdamSmithee to put his name on the list simply
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I doubt it is worth it; I meant it to be a silly joke rather than a complaint.
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I agree. One should only use references to books and peer-reviewed journals.
2896:, that's why we must refer to the original versions, per their site license.
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Not all is lost, the race is still fully open! By the way, if you look at
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Yeah, I have access to Matlab, but not at home (not conveniently, anyway).
4479:
The Springer server is down every now and then. Will come back eventually.
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problem, anyway.) If that fails, it can be put in WP space, as a resource.
2543:, you will see a good harvest of math articles for March 15. Awesome work!
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to ordinary non-mathematicians who know what mathematical induction is, and
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is the past participle (has been spread out, roughly). My MicroRobert says
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For Арнольд, we may as well defer to the way it appears on his books and
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2755:(see under 1897), except the reference I have is for Indiana not Kansas.
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appreciate it if some interested folks would drop by and take a look. --
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I wrote a note on his talk page a few days ago about his revertions at
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It is quite a tricky job, especially where redirects are concerned. For
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Move of "Ruler-and-compass constructions" to "compass and straightedge"
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intended to explain what mathematical induction is, nor how to use it.
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Ok I see. Yes I noticed the odd name. I think I will move the article.
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article page have a prominent link to help with missing characters? --
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html formulas are perfectly acceptable (unless they look awful, like Σ
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I am the "user went on a crusade to replace all instances of ℵ with
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3800:. I think what happens is that HTML tidy sees the second <sup: -->
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An prefatory statement right at the top, saying that this article is
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any good answer (it's why I slapped my own article on Kunen's book,
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I would join but you see, I'm on vacation. Good luck to you all. --
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he feels out of place; doing so will put him correctly in place :)
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Substantial expansion and organization of the introductory section.
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I've been playing around with the database dumps and extracted the
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Wikiproject), going through those articles and categorizing them.
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And so I have now expanded the article far beyond the stub stage,
1257:. In particular I've emptied its rather ill-defined subcategory
3475:: 12 edits, 11 reverted (As DYLAN LENNON: 14 edits, 10 reverted)
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3.14159 or the like. The fact that 22/7 is a convergent in the
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doesn't look right in the MathML output (it's rendered "d x").
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Notice: interested contributors may wish to participate in the
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if you haven't been editing long enough to create a User page!
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before launching an ill-conceived massive alteration campaign—
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the only pages which link directly to it are 6 redirect pages
1595:
and I are having a discussion about the correct definition of
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33:
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The Springer encyclopedia seems pretty weak in set theory. --
1284:, which had an identity crisis as some people thought it was
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But my point is none of these. I'm genuinely puzzled by the
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in WP to the one in Springer. Tell me which one is better.--
3666:
Proof that the sum of the reciprocals of the primes diverges
5457:
Some of us can't agree on how to properly call the article
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There is a discussion on which name is more appropriate at
2816:. (I don't think the neologism being published as part of
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Cool, I even managed to find the changelog that fixed it (
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All in all, I don't see any pressing need for putting the
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WAREL has been reverted by at least 17 distinct editors:
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nevertheless, but Google seems to support both usages. —
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talk:gradient#Should gradient be a disambigutation page?
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so it kills that one too. Finally the last </sup: -->
2426:. The names of the big categories are pretty intuitive:
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So how do you know when it's étale and when it's étalé?
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JA: YARTIW (yet another reason to ignore wikipundits).
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Hmmm... does the same thing happen at all font sizes?
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LOL... I remember adding that to (what is now called)
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Were we? I missed that. Why would we want to do that?
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There is some disagreement on what to include in the
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block him with a clear heart. Wonder what you think.
3456:'s edits (WAREL is a reincarnation of DYLAN LENNON).
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I've put in one of a few joint subcategories such as
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I'd shoot for at least one level more specific than
2164:
Therefore, I have invited those who voted to delete
4283:I was quite disappointed in that it doesn't have a
2287:How about showing the whole lot of them the way to
1871:, which of course is linked to from many articles.
1277:of puzzles there that really aren't mathematical.)
5360:? I'd say the latter looks better on my screen. --
5187:
4973:
4373:Set Theory: An Introduction to Independence Proofs
3291:
3065:
2634:
2098:intended to teach mathematical induction. It was
2087:This article was intended to be comprehensible to
1643:
1253:I've been being WP:BOLD with the subcategories of
3823:http://bugzilla.wikimedia.org/show_bug.cgi?id=108
3210:That is a dangerous attitude; but in the case of
2214:For context, see the following article histories
2175:I also ask others here to vote on it by clicking
1771:Most linked to and least linked to maths articles
4353:SpringerLink Online Encyclopaedia of Mathematics
3493:: 6 edits, 3 reverted, the other 3 self-reverted
3265:'s papers that I could find; they were added by
2630:
2322:Knowledge:WikiProject_Mathematics/Wikipedia_1.0
4411:I have merged their lists of entries into the
4115:, and the Indian stuff should be moved there.
3316:Knowledge:WikiProject Mathematics/Participants
5229:.) This is a page in my personal user space;
4258:Would be a good idea to add those entries to
1742:Knowledge:Pages needing attention/Mathematics
1259:Category:Mathematical recreations and puzzles
1232:This page has archives. Sections older than
57:
8:
5436:. Please share your views on any of this at
4793:, good for algebraic surfaces. It relies on
4724:good, but it doesn't do 3D and I need that.
4191:Springer Online Encyclopaedia of Mathematics
4111:Never mind. That article exists, its called
4262:. I will try to look into that these days.
1852:And it holds slot 77 which is almost pi/4.
3570:He/she was even reverted twice on his/her
1556:Elementary function (differential algebra)
1538:Elementary function (differential algebra)
1498:, which is not so common in English. HTH.
64:
50:
5180:
5008:The HTML entity ℵ looks like it works...
4966:
4719:Programs for linear algebra illustrations
4503:support for Japanese and Cyrillic in PNGs
4420:By the way, I brought some order in that
4228:B.V. Khvedelidze, G.L. Litvinov (2001) ,
3284:
3115:, and it took a lot of convincing to get
3044:
3024:
3006:
2984:
2977:
2971:
2966:
2954:
2621:
2392:User:Salix alba/maths/uncategorised maths
1631:
1629:
1532:Location of "elementary function" article
3791:I've noticed this before. It's actually
3310:Please sign up on the participants list!
3243:stopped publishing in journals as well.
2291:, which wants editors like that? ;-: -->
1286:Category:Puzzle computer and video games
4518:(recently got attacked by spammers :-))
3033:
1249:recategorizing recreational mathematics
88:
4322:Ours is definitely more self-adjoint:
3806:and can't find a matching <sup: -->
2343:Knowledge talk:Scientific peer reviews
2315:Articles for the Knowledge 1.0 project
1566:, so I had to create something else.
18:Knowledge talk:WikiProject Mathematics
5526:WikiProject Mathematics archives/2006
5206:common courtesy suggest you at least
4185:Springer Encyclopaedia of Mathematics
3805:. Then it sees the next </sup: -->
2935:Please vote on this proposed deletion
2335:Knowledge talk:Scientific peer review
2082:Three forms of mathematical induction
7:
5467:Talk:Ruler and compass constructions
5438:Talk:Ruler and compass constructions
4132:Another tedious orthography question
3753:<span class="db-dGV4aHRtbA": -->
2697:History of human knowledge about pi
1311:Category:Mathematicians by religion
1306:Category:Mathematicians by religion
1288:while others couldn't tell it from
5345:What about the difference between
5182:
4968:
3750:is getting rendered as this html:
3684:, and Jitse wrote one today about
2820:makes it any less a neologism.) —
1661:I would like to note that per the
1588:Definition of General Linear Group
45:WikiProject Mathematics archives (
32:
5453:Poll on "ruler" vs "straightedge"
3739:(at the bottom of the section on
1280:While I was at it I also emptied
1263:Category:Recreational mathematics
1255:Category:Recreational mathematics
1236:may be automatically archived by
5322:
4422:Knowledge:Missing science topics
4413:Knowledge:Missing science topics
4260:Knowledge:Missing science topics
4085:had some pronouncemnts as well.
3842:Thanks for the pointer. Is this
2469:is a good first option. Then my
1577:Could someone execute the move?
38:
5492:Jim Loy's angle trisection page
5459:Ruler and compass constructions
5434:Ruler and compass constructions
5270:of editors who assume that the
4499:Major changes since 0.4.3 are:
4079:Category:History of mathematics
2753:Chronology of computation of pi
2196:My assumption of good faith in
5461:, with the other option being
4990:PNG shouldn't be used inline.
3162:publishes a lot of his papers
3003:
2990:
2432:Category:Mathematical analysis
1644:{\displaystyle {\frac {q}{2}}}
1560:List of mathematical functions
1558:was created what is currently
1376:Category:Christians in science
1350:Category:Christians in science
1315:Category:Jewish mathematicians
1:
4799:Interactive geometry software
5221:and adjust the things under
4521:page illustrating blahtex's
4309:Also compare the article on
4277:First article I hit was the
3557:List of real analysis topics
3497:Proof that 0.999... equals 1
3269:, who claims to be his son.
3095:list of topics related to pi
2672:Be my guest, my friend. :)
2475:list of mathematics articles
5376:tags. For example, look at
4625:Normal, no style, enlarged.
4235:Encyclopedia of Mathematics
4189:I just stumbled across the
3975:talk:decimal representation
3772:.. which is clearly wrong.
2436:Category:Mathematical logic
1777:most links and least linked
1620:to tag articles in need of
1271:Category:Mechanical puzzles
5542:
5503:18:33, 31 March 2006 (UTC)
5479:21:49, 29 March 2006 (UTC)
5448:17:58, 28 March 2006 (UTC)
5418:01:21, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
5370:23:39, 29 March 2006 (UTC)
5306:12:26, 29 March 2006 (UTC)
5296:09:10, 29 March 2006 (UTC)
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5238:07:07, 29 March 2006 (UTC)
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4864:18:52, 28 March 2006 (UTC)
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4179:18:35, 25 March 2006 (UTC)
4162:02:02, 25 March 2006 (UTC)
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4120:01:02, 25 March 2006 (UTC)
4090:00:54, 25 March 2006 (UTC)
4060:22:46, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
4034:22:41, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
4024:22:04, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
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3987:03:39, 21 March 2006 (UTC)
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3914:23:16, 20 March 2006 (UTC)
3880:20:16, 20 March 2006 (UTC)
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3830:18:35, 20 March 2006 (UTC)
3813:18:30, 20 March 2006 (UTC)
3786:16:12, 20 March 2006 (UTC)
3722:13:11, 20 March 2006 (UTC)
3708:06:53, 20 March 2006 (UTC)
3675:01:23, 20 March 2006 (UTC)
3545:Wiener's tauberian theorem
3427:02:58, 19 March 2006 (UTC)
3405:06:18, 18 March 2006 (UTC)
3383:03:41, 18 March 2006 (UTC)
3373:01:17, 18 March 2006 (UTC)
3338:00:28, 18 March 2006 (UTC)
3323:22:15, 17 March 2006 (UTC)
3304:16:18, 18 March 2006 (UTC)
3274:05:57, 17 March 2006 (UTC)
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3102:02:22, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
2927:10:20, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
2906:16:21, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
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2760:22:34, 17 March 2006 (UTC)
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2725:01:40, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
2715:00:48, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
2682:02:10, 24 March 2006 (UTC)
2668:01:08, 18 March 2006 (UTC)
2646:05:32, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
2605:05:01, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
2587:05:00, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
2576:04:55, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
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2534:19:48, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
2524:05:08, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
2504:03:27, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
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2418:03:03, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
2404:20:14, 14 March 2006 (UTC)
2376:08:47, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
2354:17:10, 11 March 2006 (UTC)
2329:16:40, 13 April 2006 (UTC)
2160:you can read this article.
1356:, a Christian writer, and
1313:has a single subcategory,
5512:19:59, 7 April 2006 (UTC)
5507:Please! Neusis? Yes? No?
4674:03:39, 2 April 2006 (UTC)
4639:imagination). See image.
4489:02:36, 6 April 2006 (UTC)
4474:07:15, 5 April 2006 (UTC)
3795:a bug in the LaTeX =: -->
3529:: 2 edits, both reverted.
2892:planetmath articles, see
2702:This is the new title of
2307:19:30, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
2296:19:24, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
2282:14:49, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
2259:05:47, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
2240:19:47, 7 March 2006 (UTC)
2209:18:00, 7 March 2006 (UTC)
2187:23:42, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
2114:It was not comprehensible
2067:22:26, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
2055:22:24, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
2032:21:58, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
2010:21:40, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1993:23:26, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1976:21:31, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1961:21:13, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1952:20:25, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1941:20:12, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1927:20:04, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1912:19:51, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1900:18:31, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1885:Stone–Weierstrass theorem
1879:17:15, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1869:Stone–Weierstrass theorem
1857:15:31, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1840:14:33, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1827:14:15, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1813:13:54, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1784:top linked maths articles
1766:01:48, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1754:23:57, 5 March 2006 (UTC)
1732:23:45, 5 March 2006 (UTC)
1713:23:42, 5 March 2006 (UTC)
1704:23:37, 5 March 2006 (UTC)
1656:00:04, 5 March 2006 (UTC)
1607:22:19, 4 March 2006 (UTC)
1601:Talk:General_linear_group
1582:04:56, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1571:02:10, 3 March 2006 (UTC)
1562:was in an article called
1549:23:50, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
1527:11:18, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
1517:21:08, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1503:09:13, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
1474:05:12, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
1443:03:56, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
1425:03:36, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
1412:03:30, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
1402:03:11, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
1383:14:49, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
1365:09:05, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
1343:07:19, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
1327:23:48, 1 March 2006 (UTC)
1301:14:35, 1 March 2006 (UTC)
5463:Compass and straightedge
5274:is broken because their
3541:: 2 edits, both reverted
3481:: 11 edits. 10 reverted.
3469:: 17 edits, all reverted
2359:Can you guys have a look
2132:...and voted to delete.
1794:maths redirect frequency
5411:, and tags <sup: -->
5188:{\displaystyle \aleph }
4974:{\displaystyle \aleph }
4516:http://wiki.blahtex.org
4351:Is it worth an article
4166:Transliteration of the
3778:Wikitech-l mailing list
3747:2^{4^{n}}</math: -->
3658:Hilbert's fifth problem
3565:36% of all edits logged
3523:: 3 edits, all reverted
3505:: 5 edits, all reverted
3499:: 5 edits, all reverted
2562:already! Dmharvey, now
1789:orphaned maths articles
1779:mathematics articles.
5189:
4975:
4626:
4537:(currently 337 errors)
4495:blahtex 0.4.4 released
3963:Decimal representation
3682:decimal representation
3479:Decimal representation
3293:
3241:Alexander Grothendieck
3067:
2636:
2473:will list them to the
2448:Category:Number theory
2345:by working scientists.
2216:Decimal representation
2123:mathematical induction
1645:
1239:Lowercase sigmabot III
5190:
5137:conveniently list. --
4976:
4789:Been there done that
4624:
4375:, with an OR tag). --
4311:Self-adjoint operator
3533:Fermat's last theorem
3517:: 4 edits, 2 reverted
3511:: 5 edits, 1 reverted
3487:: 6 edits, 3 reverted
3467:Twin prime conjecture
3294:
3292:{\displaystyle \neq }
3068:
2637:
2541:my bot's changes page
2381:Categorizing articles
2224:Twin prime conjecture
2172:form of the article.
1646:
1508:Please continue with
1282:Category:Puzzle games
5432:moved it instead to
5217:Suggestion: Look at
5179:
4965:
3999:There is an editor,
3977:. Comments welcome.
3785:_rendering_bug": -->
3607:User:Oleg Alexandrov
3503:Decidability (logic)
3283:
3076:Therefore 22/7 : -->
2953:
2800:Obviously, we can't
2635:{\displaystyle ''\!}
2620:
2467:Category:Mathematics
2424:Category:Mathematics
2411:Category:Mathematics
2320:Discussion moved to
2245:I left a comment at
2042:, even assuming you
2040:Burali-Forti paradox
1628:
1597:general linear group
1564:Elementary functions
5469:are solicited. :)
5330:This page contains
4279:normal distribution
3741:odd perfect numbers
3299:NP. No comments...
2976:
2121:The article titled
1758:I agree with Oleg.
1542:Elementary function
1540:should be moved to
1352:is applied both to
5280:browser watch site
5185:
4971:
4627:
4141:Vladimir Drinfel'd
4005:transfinite number
3994:transfinite number
3743:), this math tag:
3650:Riemann hypothesis
3559:: 1 edit, reverted
3553:: 1 edit, reverted
3547:: 1 edit, reverted
3535:: 1 edit, reverted
3509:Riemann hypothesis
3289:
3090:continued fraction
3082:Putnam Competition
3063:
3034:
2962:
2632:
2631:
2089:all mathematicians
1641:
5354:''x''<sup: -->
5343:
5342:
4757:Fredrik Johansson
4726:Fredrik Johansson
4641:Fredrik Johansson
4586:Fredrik Johansson
4584:Firefox 1.5.0.1.
4556:Fredrik Johansson
4462:Fredrik Johansson
4230:"Fredholm kernel"
4047:a limit, but not
3967:decimal expansion
3873:User:Jitse Niesen
3599:User:Arthur Rubin
3579:User:Jitse Niesen
3454:User:DYLAN LENNON
3052:
3031:
2444:Category:Topology
2440:Category:Geometry
2368:Political Science
2273:Talk:al-Khwarizmi
2202:User:DYLAN LENNON
1822:has 314 links...
1676:math style manual
1663:math style manual
1639:
1616:I have created a
1579:Fredrik Johansson
1546:Fredrik Johansson
1370:Hmm, I wonder if
1246:
1245:
95:Nov 2002–Dec 2003
5533:
5412:and <sub: -->
5326:
5319:
5194:
5192:
5191:
5186:
4980:
4978:
4977:
4972:
4952:will suffice. --
4826:you folks say? -
4821:IE compatibility
4741:I made with it.
4242:
4193:it claims to be
3821:See for example
3769:
3735:Just noticed at
3635:User:Paul August
3368:
3362:
3356:
3350:
3298:
3296:
3295:
3290:
3157:Well, we should
3072:
3070:
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3032:
3030:
3029:
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3011:
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2988:
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2428:Category:Algebra
2029:Charles Matthews
1726:
1720:
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1650:
1648:
1647:
1642:
1640:
1632:
1593:Charles Matthews
1500:Charles Matthews
1453:It is certainly
1362:Charles Matthews
1358:Bernhard Riemann
1290:Category:Puzzles
1267:Category:Puzzles
1241:
1225:
66:
59:
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42:
34:
5541:
5540:
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5488:
5471:Oleg Alexandrov
5455:
5426:
5406:
5347:''x''²
5177:
5176:
5077:Septentrionalis
4963:
4962:
4856:Oleg Alexandrov
4823:
4777:Oleg Alexandrov
4743:Oleg Alexandrov
4721:
4706:Oleg Alexandrov
4695:
4497:
4481:Oleg Alexandrov
4445:Oleg Alexandrov
4427:Oleg Alexandrov
4390:Septentrionalis
4334:Oleg Alexandrov
4264:Oleg Alexandrov
4227:
4187:
4137:Vladimir Arnold
4134:
4031:Septentrionalis
3997:
3979:Oleg Alexandrov
3971:
3770:
3764:
3759:
3748:
3733:
3700:Oleg Alexandrov
3690:User talk:WAREL
3603:User:ANTI-WAREL
3527:Halting problem
3444:
3366:
3360:
3354:
3348:
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3281:
3280:
3239:Off-topic: but
3186:Oleg Alexandrov
3132:Oleg Alexandrov
3109:
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3013:
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2951:
2950:
2937:
2898:Oleg Alexandrov
2849:Oleg Alexandrov
2812:) and probable
2810:copyright traps
2772:
2712:Septentrionalis
2700:
2674:Oleg Alexandrov
2623:
2618:
2617:
2597:Oleg Alexandrov
2568:Oleg Alexandrov
2545:Oleg Alexandrov
2516:Oleg Alexandrov
2499:ok guys thanks
2479:Oleg Alexandrov
2396:Oleg Alexandrov
2383:
2373:Midnighttonight
2364:Gallagher Index
2361:
2338:
2317:
2293:Septentrionalis
2268:
2251:Oleg Alexandrov
2232:Oleg Alexandrov
2228:User talk:WAREL
2194:
2085:
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1990:Septentrionalis
1958:Septentrionalis
1773:
1746:Oleg Alexandrov
1724:
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1696:Oleg Alexandrov
1690:
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1626:
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1590:
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1514:Septentrionalis
1391:
1389:french spelling
1374:belongs in the
1319:Oleg Alexandrov
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5407:(using entity
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4801:for others. --
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4678:
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4676:
4655:
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4649:
4648:
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4646:
4619:
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4596:
4595:
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4577:
4576:
4575:
4574:
4562:
4561:
4553:
4539:
4538:
4531:
4525:
4519:
4510:Useful links:
4508:
4507:
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4496:
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4492:
4491:
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4457:
4456:
4455:
4438:
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4181:
4164:
4157:, "Arnold". --
4133:
4130:
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4101:
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4001:User:Jagged 85
3996:
3990:
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3902:mediazilla:599
3889:
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3816:
3815:
3803:n</sup: -->
3802:4</sup: -->
3798:n</sup: -->
3780:mailing list.
3763:
3761:to appear as:
3758:</span: -->
3755:4</sup: -->
3752:
3745:
3737:perfect number
3732:
3728:
3727:
3726:
3725:
3724:
3711:
3710:
3694:
3693:
3686:perfect number
3654:Perfect number
3619:User:Trovatore
3595:User:Schildt.a
3561:
3560:
3554:
3548:
3542:
3536:
3530:
3524:
3518:
3512:
3506:
3500:
3494:
3488:
3485:Zeta constants
3482:
3476:
3470:
3464:
3461:Perfect number
3443:
3439:Statistics on
3437:
3436:
3435:
3434:
3433:
3432:
3431:
3430:
3429:
3412:
3411:
3410:
3409:
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3267:User:Diegueins
3259:
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3155:
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3074:
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3062:
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3023:
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2762:
2744:
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2741:
2728:
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2699:
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2684:
2653:
2652:
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2650:
2649:
2648:
2628:
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2608:
2607:
2590:
2589:
2579:
2578:
2537:
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2511:
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2509:
2508:
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2506:
2492:
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2460:
2459:
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2457:
2382:
2379:
2360:
2357:
2337:
2332:
2316:
2313:
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2309:
2267:
2262:
2243:
2242:
2193:
2190:
2162:
2161:
2149:
2148:
2144:
2143:
2130:
2129:
2118:
2117:
2084:
2079:
2078:
2077:
2070:
2069:
2058:
2057:
2047:
2038:article is at
2023:
2020:
2019:
2018:
2012:
2002:
2001:
2000:
1999:
1998:
1997:
1996:
1995:
1944:
1943:
1930:
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1919:
1918:
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1914:
1864:
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1861:
1860:
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1845:
1844:
1843:
1842:
1830:
1829:
1797:
1796:
1791:
1786:
1772:
1769:
1737:
1736:
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1715:
1680:
1679:
1671:
1670:
1666:
1638:
1635:
1613:
1610:
1589:
1586:
1585:
1584:
1574:
1573:
1533:
1530:
1520:
1519:
1482:being a verb,
1477:
1476:
1450:
1449:
1448:
1447:
1446:
1445:
1430:
1429:
1428:
1427:
1415:
1414:
1390:
1387:
1386:
1385:
1346:
1345:
1335:Meni Rosenfeld
1307:
1304:
1250:
1247:
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875:
820:
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545:
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435:
380:
325:
270:
215:
160:
105:
84:
83:
82:
79:
78:
75:
74:
69:
68:
61:
54:
46:
43:
37:
31:
15:
14:
13:
10:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
5538:
5527:
5524:
5523:
5521:
5514:
5513:
5510:
5505:
5504:
5501:
5497:
5493:
5486:
5483:
5481:
5480:
5476:
5472:
5468:
5465:. "Votes" at
5464:
5460:
5452:
5450:
5449:
5446:
5443:
5439:
5435:
5430:
5423:
5419:
5416:
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5025:
5014:
5011:
5007:
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5002:
4998:
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4996:
4993:
4989:
4988:
4987:
4984:
4960:
4959:
4958:
4955:
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4914:
4909:
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4778:
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4707:
4704:
4700:
4692:
4689:
4675:
4672:
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4666:
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4663:
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4637:
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4611:
4608:
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4602:
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4587:
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4549:
4548:
4547:
4546:
4543:
4536:
4532:
4530:
4526:
4524:
4520:
4517:
4514:test wiki at
4513:
4512:
4511:
4505:
4502:
4501:
4500:
4494:
4490:
4486:
4482:
4478:
4477:
4476:
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4463:
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4450:
4446:
4442:
4441:
4440:
4439:
4436:
4432:
4428:
4423:
4419:
4418:
4414:
4410:
4409:
4408:
4407:
4404:
4394:
4391:
4387:
4383:
4382:
4381:
4378:
4374:
4369:
4368:
4367:
4366:
4362:
4358:
4354:
4343:
4339:
4335:
4332:
4327:
4324:
4323:
4321:
4320:
4319:
4316:
4312:
4308:
4307:
4306:
4303:
4299:
4296:
4295:
4294:
4293:
4290:
4286:
4282:
4280:
4274:
4273:
4269:
4265:
4261:
4254:
4251:
4248:
4247:
4241:
4237:
4236:
4231:
4226:
4225:
4224:
4223:
4218:
4217:
4216:
4215:
4211:
4207:
4200:
4196:
4195:
4194:
4192:
4184:
4180:
4177:
4173:
4169:
4165:
4163:
4160:
4156:
4152:
4151:
4150:
4149:
4146:
4142:
4139:or Arnol'd?
4138:
4131:
4121:
4118:
4114:
4110:
4109:
4108:
4107:
4106:
4105:
4104:
4103:
4102:
4091:
4088:
4084:
4083:Immanuel Kant
4080:
4075:
4074:
4073:
4072:
4071:
4070:
4069:
4068:
4061:
4058:
4054:
4050:
4046:
4042:
4037:
4036:
4035:
4032:
4027:
4026:
4025:
4022:
4017:
4016:
4015:
4014:
4011:
4006:
4002:
3995:
3991:
3989:
3988:
3984:
3980:
3976:
3968:
3964:
3961:
3947:
3944:
3940:
3937:
3936:
3935:
3934:
3933:
3932:
3931:
3930:
3929:
3928:
3927:
3926:
3915:
3911:
3907:
3903:
3899:
3898:
3897:
3896:
3895:
3894:
3893:
3892:
3891:
3890:
3881:
3878:
3874:
3870:
3869:
3868:
3867:
3866:
3865:
3864:
3863:
3856:
3853:
3849:
3845:
3841:
3840:
3839:
3838:
3837:
3836:
3831:
3828:
3824:
3820:
3819:
3818:
3817:
3814:
3811:
3804:</sup: -->
3799:</sup: -->
3797:4<sup: -->
3794:
3790:
3789:
3788:
3787:
3783:
3779:
3773:
3768:
3762:
3754:2<sup: -->
3751:
3746:<math: -->
3744:
3742:
3738:
3731:rendering bug
3730:<math: -->
3729:
3723:
3720:
3715:
3714:
3713:
3712:
3709:
3705:
3701:
3696:
3695:
3691:
3687:
3683:
3679:
3678:
3677:
3676:
3673:
3669:
3667:
3663:
3662:Perfect power
3659:
3655:
3651:
3646:
3644:
3643:User:Melchoir
3640:
3636:
3632:
3628:
3624:
3620:
3616:
3612:
3608:
3604:
3600:
3596:
3592:
3588:
3587:User:Dmharvey
3584:
3580:
3575:
3573:
3572:own talk page
3568:
3566:
3558:
3555:
3552:
3549:
3546:
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3534:
3531:
3528:
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3390:
3389:
3384:
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3374:
3371:
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3363:
3357:
3351:
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3342:
3339:
3336:
3332:
3327:
3326:
3325:
3324:
3321:
3317:
3309:
3305:
3302:
3286:
3278:
3277:
3276:
3275:
3272:
3268:
3264:
3249:
3246:
3242:
3238:
3237:
3236:
3235:
3234:
3233:
3232:
3231:
3230:
3229:
3220:
3217:
3213:
3209:
3208:
3207:
3206:
3205:
3204:
3203:
3202:
3195:
3191:
3187:
3183:
3182:
3181:
3180:
3179:
3178:
3173:
3170:
3165:
3160:
3156:
3154:
3151:
3148:
3143:
3142:
3141:
3137:
3133:
3129:
3128:
3127:
3126:
3123:
3118:
3114:
3106:
3104:
3103:
3100:
3099:Michael Hardy
3096:
3091:
3085:
3083:
3078:
3060:
3057:
3054:
3049:
3046:
3041:
3038:
3035:
3025:
3021:
3017:
3014:
3007:
2999:
2996:
2993:
2985:
2981:
2972:
2967:
2963:
2959:
2956:
2949:
2948:
2947:
2944:
2942:
2934:
2928:
2925:
2922:
2917:
2916:
2915:
2914:
2907:
2903:
2899:
2895:
2891:
2887:
2886:
2885:
2881:
2877:
2873:
2868:
2867:
2866:
2865:
2858:
2854:
2850:
2845:
2844:
2843:
2840:
2836:
2832:
2831:
2830:
2827:
2823:
2819:
2815:
2811:
2807:
2803:
2799:
2798:
2797:
2796:
2792:
2788:
2784:
2780:
2775:
2769:
2761:
2758:
2754:
2750:
2749:
2748:
2747:
2746:
2745:
2740:
2737:
2732:
2731:
2730:
2729:
2726:
2723:
2722:Michael Hardy
2719:
2718:
2717:
2716:
2713:
2709:
2705:
2704:History of pi
2698:
2695:
2683:
2679:
2675:
2671:
2670:
2669:
2666:
2661:
2660:
2659:
2658:
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2644:
2626:
2624:
2616:
2615:
2614:
2613:
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2611:
2606:
2602:
2598:
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2593:
2592:
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2588:
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2580:
2577:
2573:
2569:
2565:
2561:
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2555:
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2527:
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2525:
2521:
2517:
2505:
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2377:
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2365:
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2347:
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2344:
2336:
2333:
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2330:
2327:
2324:
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2314:
2308:
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2299:
2298:
2297:
2294:
2290:
2286:
2285:
2284:
2283:
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2279:
2274:
2266:
2263:
2261:
2260:
2256:
2252:
2248:
2241:
2237:
2233:
2229:
2226:, as well as
2225:
2221:
2217:
2213:
2212:
2211:
2210:
2207:
2203:
2199:
2191:
2189:
2188:
2185:
2184:Michael Hardy
2180:
2178:
2173:
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85:Earlier years
81:
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62:
60:
55:
53:
48:
47:
41:
36:
35:
27:
23:
19:
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5329:
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5230:
5222:
5211:
5207:
5174:
5072:
5049:Arthur Rubin
4907:
4824:
4722:
4696:
4552:\int f(x) dx
4540:
4509:
4498:
4468:
4459:
4399:
4385:
4350:
4284:
4275:
4257:
4233:
4203:
4197:
4188:
4135:
4100:
4052:
4048:
4044:
4040:
3998:
3972:
3906:Jitse Niesen
3792:
3774:
3771:
3766:
3760:
3757:n</i: -->
3749:
3734:
3670:
3647:
3631:User:Fredrik
3627:User:Fropuff
3623:User:Zundark
3583:User:JoshuaZ
3576:
3571:
3569:
3564:
3562:
3551:Cousin prime
3491:Finite field
3448:
3445:
3397:
3346:
3345:
3313:
3260:
3163:
3158:
3110:
3086:
3079:
3075:
2945:
2938:
2889:
2888:We actually
2834:
2822:Arthur Rubin
2805:
2801:
2776:
2773:
2701:
2563:
2559:
2538:
2512:
2388:
2384:
2362:
2348:
2340:
2339:
2319:
2318:
2301:
2276:
2269:
2265:al-Khwarizmi
2244:
2195:
2181:
2174:
2169:
2165:
2163:
2157:
2153:
2135:
2134:
2131:
2125:
2113:
2108:
2104:
2099:
2095:
2093:
2088:
2086:
2043:
2025:
1798:
1774:
1757:
1738:
1615:
1591:
1563:
1535:
1521:
1509:
1496:espace étalé
1495:
1487:
1483:
1479:
1478:
1466:
1462:
1458:
1454:
1392:
1348:I note that
1347:
1309:
1294:
1279:
1274:
1252:
1233:
1156:
1101:
1042:
987:
932:
877:
822:
767:
712:
657:
602:
547:
492:
437:
382:
327:
272:
217:
176:
162:
107:
103:Sep–Dec 2004
99:Jan–Aug 2004
44:
5490:Please see
5442:Paul August
5283:conclusion.
5233:edit it! --
4199:mathematics
3992:Problem at
3611:User:Elroch
3473:Real number
3335:AdamSmithee
3331:AdamSmithee
3167:required. -
2818:Mathematica
2806:referencing
2566:unfair. :)
2351:Ancheta Wis
2275:. Cheers, —
2220:Real number
1935:Paul August
1906:Paul August
1873:Paul August
1835:No way....
1760:Paul August
1510:sheaf space
1492:sheaf space
1467:étale space
1397:incorrect?
5362:Salix alba
5332:Indic text
5212:especially
4803:Salix alba
4550:The dx in
4535:error list
4386:Set Theory
4357:Salix alba
4206:Salix alba
3756:<i: -->
3639:User:KSmrq
3515:Chen prime
3450:User:WAREL
3441:User:WAREL
3402:Ryan Reich
3117:User:WAREL
2835:particular
2814:neologisms
2643:Jon Awbrey
2584:Jon Awbrey
2200:(formerly
2198:User:WAREL
2138:including
2007:Jon Awbrey
1968:Salix alba
1949:Jon Awbrey
1924:Jon Awbrey
1892:Salix alba
1824:Ryan Reich
1805:Salix alba
1440:Ryan Reich
1409:Ryan Reich
91:Motivation
5509:John Reid
5500:John Reid
5429:John Reid
5245:JRSpriggs
5227:Code 2000
5219:this page
5197:JRSpriggs
5139:Trovatore
5129:Dysprosia
5064:Dysprosia
5039:Trovatore
5010:Dysprosia
4992:Dysprosia
4950:Code 2000
4913:Dysprosia
4889:Dysprosia
4871:Dysprosia
4839:Dysprosia
4768:Dysprosia
4529:home page
4377:Trovatore
4302:Trovatore
4240:EMS Press
4168:soft sign
4057:Trovatore
4051:-finite,
4043:-finite,
4010:Trovatore
3848:HTML Tidy
3844:HTML Tidy
3263:Diego Saá
3113:Diego Saá
2779:MathWorld
2774:Hi guys,
2770:MathWorld
2452:Trovatore
2052:Trovatore
1986:loan-word
1982:loan word
1729:Isopropyl
1710:Isopropyl
1653:Isopropyl
1395:this edit
5520:Category
5496:tomahawk
4795:JavaView
4791:SingSurf
4739:pictures
4699:gradient
4691:gradient
4671:Dmharvey
4607:Dmharvey
4569:Dmharvey
4542:Dmharvey
4533:updated
4527:blahtex
4523:features
4289:Cburnett
4155:web page
4145:Blotwell
4113:infinity
4021:Gro-Tsen
3877:Dmharvey
3827:Dmharvey
3810:Dmharvey
3719:Dmharvey
3672:Dmharvey
3615:User:Mfc
3122:Dmharvey
2880:contribs
2791:contribs
2757:Dmharvey
2710:crowds?
2531:Dmharvey
2501:Dmharvey
2415:Dmharvey
2206:Dmharvey
2022:Endashes
1837:Dmharvey
1801:Squircle
1618:template
1568:XaosBits
1536:I think
1471:Blotwell
1422:Dmharvey
1399:Dmharvey
1372:Voltaire
1298:Blotwell
24: |
20: |
5388:versus
5338:More...
5272:article
5073:display
4850:policy.
4471:Mct mht
4053:without
3591:User:EJ
3539:Soliton
3521:Decimal
3398:because
2894:WP:PMEX
2872:Samsara
2802:include
2783:Samsara
2289:Wikinfo
2170:current
2094:It was
1459:*éspace
1234:15 days
22:Archive
5485:Neusis
5403:) to ⁄
5401:frac34
5352:² and
5268:hubris
5231:do not
5053:(talk)
4693:issues
4285:single
4045:beyond
3271:R.e.b.
3212:Witten
3159:prefer
3150:(Talk)
2924:(Talk)
2826:(talk)
2708:Pi day
2564:that's
2166:before
2158:before
1818:Heh.
1694:think.
1480:Étaler
1455:espace
5415:KSmrq
5413:). --
5409:frasl
5303:lethe
5293:KSmrq
5289:every
5255:lethe
5235:KSmrq
5149:lethe
5088:lethe
5001:lethe
4983:lethe
4954:KSmrq
4945:UTF-8
4922:lethe
4899:lethe
4880:lethe
4828:lethe
4403:lethe
4315:CSTAR
4250:linas
4176:KSmrq
4172:names
4159:KSmrq
4117:linas
4087:linas
4041:trans
3688:(see
3424:linas
3380:lethe
3320:linas
3245:linas
3216:KSmrq
3169:lethe
3107:arXiv
2839:lethe
2736:linas
2665:linas
2366:is a
2326:Tompw
2192:WAREL
2064:KSmrq
1854:linas
1722:LaTeX
1688:LaTeX
1622:LaTeX
1612:LaTeX
1488:étale
1484:étalé
1463:étalé
1457:(not
1380:linas
16:<
5475:talk
5384:³ =
5366:talk
5276:view
5223:your
4860:talk
4807:talk
4781:talk
4747:talk
4710:talk
4485:talk
4449:talk
4431:talk
4361:talk
4355:? --
4338:talk
4268:talk
4210:talk
3983:talk
3910:talk
3717:it.
3704:talk
3190:talk
3164:only
3136:talk
2960:<
2902:talk
2890:copy
2876:talk
2853:talk
2787:talk
2678:talk
2601:talk
2572:talk
2560:done
2549:talk
2520:talk
2483:talk
2400:talk
2303:Ruud
2278:Ruud
2255:talk
2236:talk
2177:here
1984:not
1972:talk
1896:talk
1809:talk
1750:talk
1700:talk
1494:for
1339:talk
1323:talk
1265:and
1158:2024
1103:2023
1044:2022
989:2021
934:2020
879:2019
824:2018
769:2017
714:2016
659:2015
604:2014
549:2013
494:2012
439:2011
384:2010
329:2009
274:2008
219:2007
164:2006
109:2005
26:2006
5208:ask
4908:All
4328:=C.
3965:or
3793:not
3349:127
3301:pom
3147:C S
3097:).
3077:π.
2939:at
2921:C S
2471:bot
2154:NOT
2100:not
2096:not
1667:i=1
1524:pom
1275:lot
1207:Dec
1203:Nov
1199:Oct
1195:Sep
1191:Aug
1187:Jul
1183:Jun
1179:May
1175:Apr
1171:Mar
1167:Feb
1163:Jan
1152:Dec
1148:Nov
1144:Oct
1140:Sep
1136:Aug
1132:Jul
1128:Jun
1124:May
1120:Apr
1116:Mar
1112:Feb
1108:Jan
1093:Dec
1089:Nov
1085:Oct
1081:Sep
1077:Aug
1073:Jul
1069:Jun
1065:May
1061:Apr
1057:Mar
1053:Feb
1049:Jan
1038:Dec
1034:Nov
1030:Oct
1026:Sep
1022:Aug
1018:Jul
1014:Jun
1010:May
1006:Apr
1002:Mar
998:Feb
994:Jan
983:Dec
979:Nov
975:Oct
971:Sep
967:Aug
963:Jul
959:Jun
955:May
951:Apr
947:Mar
943:Feb
939:Jan
928:Dec
924:Nov
920:Oct
916:Sep
912:Aug
908:Jul
904:Jun
900:May
896:Apr
892:Mar
888:Feb
884:Jan
873:Dec
869:Nov
865:Oct
861:Sep
857:Aug
853:Jul
849:Jun
845:May
841:Apr
837:Mar
833:Feb
829:Jan
818:Dec
814:Nov
810:Oct
806:Sep
802:Aug
798:Jul
794:Jun
790:May
786:Apr
782:Mar
778:Feb
774:Jan
763:Dec
759:Nov
755:Oct
751:Sep
747:Aug
743:Jul
739:Jun
735:May
731:Apr
727:Mar
723:Feb
719:Jan
708:Dec
704:Nov
700:Oct
696:Sep
692:Aug
688:Jul
684:Jun
680:May
676:Apr
672:Mar
668:Feb
664:Jan
653:Dec
649:Nov
645:Oct
641:Sep
637:Aug
633:Jul
629:Jun
625:May
621:Apr
617:Mar
613:Feb
609:Jan
598:Dec
594:Nov
590:Oct
586:Sep
582:Aug
578:Jul
574:Jun
570:May
566:Apr
562:Mar
558:Feb
554:Jan
543:Dec
539:Nov
535:Oct
531:Sep
527:Aug
523:Jul
519:Jun
515:May
511:Apr
507:Mar
503:Feb
499:Jan
488:Dec
484:Nov
480:Oct
476:Sep
472:Aug
468:Jul
464:Jun
460:May
456:Apr
452:Mar
448:Feb
444:Jan
433:Dec
429:Nov
425:Oct
421:Sep
417:Aug
413:Jul
409:Jun
405:May
401:Apr
397:Mar
393:Feb
389:Jan
378:Dec
374:Nov
370:Oct
366:Sep
362:Aug
358:Jul
354:Jun
350:May
346:Apr
342:Mar
338:Feb
334:Jan
323:Dec
319:Nov
315:Oct
311:Sep
307:Aug
303:Jul
299:Jun
295:May
291:Apr
287:Mar
283:Feb
279:Jan
268:Dec
264:Nov
260:Oct
256:Sep
252:Aug
248:Jul
244:Jun
240:May
236:Apr
232:Mar
228:Feb
224:Jan
213:Dec
209:Nov
205:Oct
201:Sep
197:Aug
193:Jul
189:Jun
185:May
181:Apr
177:Mar
173:Feb
169:Jan
158:Dec
154:Nov
150:Oct
146:Sep
142:Aug
138:Jul
134:Jun
130:May
126:Apr
122:Mar
118:Feb
114:Jan
5522::
5477:)
5395:=
5368:)
5183:ℵ
5051:|
4969:ℵ
4862:)
4809:)
4783:)
4749:)
4712:)
4487:)
4451:)
4433:)
4363:)
4340:)
4270:)
4238:,
4232:,
4220:in
4212:)
4049:in
3985:)
3943:Hv
3912:)
3852:Hv
3825:.
3782:Hv
3706:)
3692:).
3664:,
3660:,
3656:,
3652:,
3641:,
3637:,
3633:,
3629:,
3625:,
3621:,
3617:,
3613:,
3609:,
3605:,
3601:,
3597:,
3593:,
3589:,
3585:,
3581:,
3574:.
3567:.
3287:≠
3192:)
3145:--
3138:)
3084:.
3058:π
3055:−
3047:22
2997:−
2964:∫
2943:.
2904:)
2882:)
2878:•
2855:)
2824:|
2793:)
2789:•
2680:)
2603:)
2574:)
2551:)
2522:)
2485:)
2446:,
2442:,
2438:,
2434:,
2430:,
2402:)
2394:.
2371:--
2349:--
2257:)
2249:.
2238:)
2222:,
2218:,
2179:.
2126:is
2091:.
2050:--
2044:do
1988:.
1974:)
1966:--
1898:)
1820:Pi
1811:)
1752:)
1725:}}
1719:{{
1702:)
1691:}}
1685:{{
1604:A5
1512:.
1461:)
1341:)
1325:)
1292:.
1205:·
1201:·
1197:·
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