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talk:WikiProject Mathematics/Archive/2023/Nov - Knowledge

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2013:. Our time would be better spent improving the text than futzing about with new sidebars. I'll echo the sentiment above that an article can in general have more than one audience, which makes for hard writing. Moreover, this is one way that we differ from textbooks: a typical textbook is made with an audience in mind and a sense of where in the curriculum it's going to be used. Another difference alluded to above is that textbooks are generally sequential, rather than "random-access". The standard approach in teaching a course is to begin at the beginning of the book and work through the chapters pretty much in the order they're printed, maybe not getting all the way to the end. The challenges of writing well in that style are going to be different than the challenges of writing well on this platform, just by the nature of the platform itself. My sense of the overall situation is that the top priority for some articles, like short ones on highly specialized upper-level topics, should be to expand, organize, and reference them. A lot of improvement in those corners of the encyclopedia would involve writing at a similar level to what the existing text presumes, but just being less half-ass about it. In other places, the top priority ought to be providing a solid opening. 1939:). And we need the later parts of our article to be usable by people who do understand the material already but want to refer to it anyway as reference material, as a quick reminder of what they already know, or as a collection of pointers to more in-depth literature to use as references for other works. Writing articles that can be used for all these purposes is even more effort, and is something typically not appreciated by readers at a different level who either think the material is too technical or too oversimplified. — 2991: 2446: 40: 3067: 2844: 2747: 2713: 2556: 2422: 3033: 2929: 2911: 2763: 2673: 2648: 2515: 2617: 2543: 2080:: It is wrong that the definition of distributions is not given in the lead. It is clearly explained that distributions are linear forms on the infinitely differential functions with compact support, and that a function can be considered as a distribution by integrating the product of the function with infinitely differential functions with compact support. This is a complete and accurate definition. 2855: 1800:
to make improvements. If the subject gets discussed somewhere I see it, e.g. at this wikiproject talk page, I'm happy to give some effort to working on accessibility of subjects that I feel nominally competent to write about. (Or if that seems too off topic for here, I'd be happy to discuss such cases at some other venue.) As one example, someone recently mentioned on the talk page of
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involves collaborating with other Wikipedians to settle on something that is precise enough for a specialist audience while also being as broadly legible as practical to a wider audience. There are hard choices to make about inter- and intra-article organization, tone, emphasis, level of detail, etc. If you want to pick an article or cluster of articles and get to work,
1359: 1467:. I wouldn't worry about the category, but you can certainly write articles like this if they don't exist, so long as the content is based on published sources (in more obscure cases the history of names and conventions may not have been directly written about). For details up through the 19th century, you could start by reading 2371:
Yes, there is plenty of agreement that we should try to work on this. But it's a huge amount of difficult work researching, synthesizing, writing, drawing or soliciting diagrams, and making decisions and compromises; it takes both mathematical subject knowledge and writing skill/taste; and ideally it
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of short glosses may be ok. In others, a more jargon-free choice of wording may be a better choice. In the case in question, explaining that a lemniscate is an algebraic curve studied by Bernoulli would not help. All we really need to say is that curves that cross themselves, like a figure 8, are not
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Adding parenthetical phrases (short pieces of text that distract from the main sentence (a complete thought, usually formatted with a capital starting letter and ending with a period) by separating pieces of it by long distances from other pieces) can make text harder to read. Using unfamiliar jargon
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It has always been thus, as I know from the day I joined the project in 2007. Knowledge is not a textbook, and this is particularly stark in advanced mathematics articles... but we should – and often do – strive to make mathematics articles as accessible as possible to the dedicated reader, by making
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Non-rhetorical question: don't most of you find yourself with the same problem when you try to read a Knowledge math article outside of your own specific field? Because last week in Toronto, when we were discussing this in a room where probably half the people had STEM degrees, most of us at least a
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These are trivial examples, but I'm picking them because I think everyone reading this can presumably understand them. This sort of thing drives me up a wall when I try to read Knowledge articles about math topics where I certainly have a background that should suffice to read a well-written article
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To be clear, the reason I didn't understand that the definition of distribution wasn't in the lede was that I didn't scroll all the way down to the last paragraph to find it. It's a little embarrassing that my statement turned out not to be true, but I think the example is still relevant in that the
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This is written as if there can and should be only one audience for each mathematics article, someone ready for the material who does not yet understand it. This is untrue. That is one kind of audience, but not the only one. We need the leads of our article to be readable by someone who is not ready
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It's hard to argue with the general goal or the first two points. The third point, about prerequisites, has been proposed many times and shot down every time. In essence, the counter-argument seems to be: The prerequisites are already encoded into the links, and anything that does much more than the
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and it occurred to me that the question oi whether to include zero was pat of a more general issue. There are many fields of Mathematics where different nomenclatures have existed, either over time or concurrently, and that articles on the evolution of nomenclature, including sign conventions, might
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We should start with a dedicated article about Book 3 of Euclid. Ideally we'd also have dedicated articles about Book I (parallelograms / affine geometry), Book II ("quadrature"), Book V (proportions), Book VI (similarity), Books VII–IX (number theory), Book X (incommensurable lines), Books XI–XIII
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style Micropedia to the Macropedia that is the rest of the article. If you try to compress the rest of the article into the introduction, and then summarize the introduction into its first paragraph, the information density becomes ridiculous; and this is partly the cause of articles that end up as
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I personally find throwing "maintenance templates" on tops of articles to be obnoxious and almost entirely useless. However, it would be nice if confused readers would take the time to start a talk page conversation with a concrete critique when they have an issue like this, so that someone can try
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Also, I think it would be good to have an article about how to factor an integer. I remember a journal article with that title decades ago. Also, Knuth, volume 2, § 4.5.4 goes through a process, but it is out of date. He first does trial factorization and then switches to Fermat's method, which
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about making changes, with the understanding that your changes might be disputed or reverted, so you are likely to need to engage in sometimes frustrating discussions and do more meta-work than typical when writing for yourself. If you get stuck or need help or feedback, you can recruit volunteers
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into a "howto". What we have now is mostly a list of wikilinks to various methods with no explanation or context. A novice reader of the integer factorization page (say a high school student) isn't going to get much out of it, even if integer factorization is relevant to one of their interests or
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OK: let me be more concrete. Does anyone think my example above about adding a parenthetical phrase to explain "lemniscates" is not the sort of thing that makes an article more useful? Can it really be better to make someone click through to get a concept we can explain pretty well in a couple of
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has a long lede that attempts many times to give the reader an intuitive idea of what distributions are, without ever actually saying explicitly what they are. It is not informative at all. One has to dig down quite considerably to learn anything on this page. The problem is hardly unique to that
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Have in mind who your audience is. You aren't writing to show your professor that you understand the material. You are writing to teach the material to someone who is at the level in mathematics to be able to understand the relevant concept, theorem, etc., but to whom this particular material is
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Have in mind who your audience is. You aren't writing to show your professor that you understand the material. You are writing to teach the material to someone who is at the level in mathematics to be able to understand the relevant concept, theorem, etc., but to whom this particular material is
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Something like that, but not just a list of factoring algorithms, but something to give guidelines about what should be used and when. I don't have a reference for this, but, unless you know that there are no small factors, I always start with some trial division. Sometimes trial division is
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This is more a question of organization than level of difficulty. I've never come up with the perfect way of expressing it, but maybe -- we want to be random-access rather than serial? We're not presenting an order in which you're supposed to learn the material. We want to make the material
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then it just can't be that the lede should be "broadly comprehensible" by appealing to intuition and lacking rigor. No one ever learned a mathematical concept without seeing its actual definition, or something very close to it. This is exemplified by many analysis articles on WP nowadays. For
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is a great example of getting this right. Note, in particular, that it does not even touch upon arithmetization of syntax, perhaps the most striking feature of Gödel's proof. Why? Because it's not an article about the proof, it's an article about the theorem, and someone with only a moderate
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I am very strongly in favor of putting in the effort to make our articles as accessible as possible. But it is significant effort, and not the kind of effort that mathematics students are often well-trained in. That said, the original post has a serious inaccuracy in its framing. It writes:
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this last weekend, it came up that a lot of us, even those with degrees in mathematics, find the bulk of en-wiki's math articles among the least penetrable on the site, even when compared against other STEM topics. There were a few constructive suggestions (I'm paraphrasing, of course):
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I think Gödel's incompleteness theorem(s) is a bad example. This is a topic which has great significance in popular mathematics and about which much philosophy, etc. has been written. It is accurate to the RS to present it as that article does. The same is not true of most math topics.
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enough. But after a certain number of small factors have been checked, do a primality test on what remains. (And you may want to do a primality test right after some factors have been found.) If it is composite, then what you do next depends on how large the remaining number is.
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If some readers do not recognize this as a definition, it is probably because passing from functions to distributions is a fundamental change of paradigm that requires some work to be well understood. Probably, the lead could be improved on this point, but this is not an easy task.
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wasn't very inspiring, and definitely needed some help. I haven't looked super closely but at least it doesn't seem to be getting worse. It wouldn't be bad to have some more group effort go into organizing and fleshing out the article though, if anyone else wants to dive in there.
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I would want some reference on which to base such an article. Something like try trial division up to some point, and if that fails to completely factor it, do a primality test on what remains. If it is composite, then try to factor it with method X. etc.
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template, but in the end it sounds like a gimmick: one more thing to have to maintain, and one more way that complicated relationships get flattened for the sake of having a box in the sidebar. It's rather like the "influenced" and "influenced by" items in
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could be abused. There's a difference between leaving out detail, and saying things that aren't true. We should never oversimplify to the point that what we're saying isn't true, at least not without an explicit warning that that's what's
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That's the vexing thing about these discussions. On the one hand, it's definitely true that many math articles are written in a way that makes them much less useful than they could be. On the other hand, we see people throwing drive-by
1701:. The idea would be to list, up front of either a section or of the article as whole, the concepts you need to understand the article, instead of having the reader discover them as they encounter links scattered through the article. E.g. 4662:, by Wagstaff, page 247 gives several tips. It also says that the Quadratic Sieve is best for numbers with 50-100 digits and the Number Field Sieve is best for numbers with more than 100 digits. At least that should go in the 1265:. Any suggestions? To be precise I am only adding links to articles that are mainly about history (usually titled "History of", "Timeline of", "Chronology of"). I am not adding articles that have a history section like 4826:
7. when a factor is discovered, check it for primality. Use the BPSW test. If you need to prove a number to be prime, use the Elliptic Curve Prime Proving method, or if you can factor p-1, use one of those methods.
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templates on articles that are written quite reasonably for any audience that has the background necessary to have a chance at the inherent subject matter. And there's a contingent that even thinks it's OK to tell
1417:, is it possible to change the modern template reference? There was a hidden comment, stating that there were a few errors or bugs about the appearance of references, along with the discussion from a long time ago 3160:
Funny story about that: I remembered doing something along these lines for physics a while ago, and I thought there was a script for it. Then I finally found my notes and discovered that I had done it by hand.
2394:" for mathematics and found their 30-day page view counts. These topics are likely to have broader audiences than many of the more esoteric articles, and only a few of them have any GA/FA stamp of approval. 4474:
basically doesn't want technical articles. They just sit in a queue before eventually someone decides they aren't of general enough interest and get dropped. Not worth the trouble to nominate things there.
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could do; also, if the way we deploy such a templates were designed well, we might be able to make clear that most of the article can be understood with just topology, and only certain sections require any
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Consider that the lede should be as broadly comprehensible as possible. In particular, it is OK if the lede oversimplifies a bit, as long as it is clear that the details can be found later in the article.
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a bit more accessible. I think it would still be good to add another paragraph to the lead (and another section to the article) describing pre-computer pen-and-paper factorization algorithms and efforts.
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I would like to call out another aspect of Jmabel's (generally reasonable) post. I disagree that we are writing to "teach the material". This is a reference work, not a textbook. We want to facilitate
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to be hard to follow, so I tried to rearrange and expand its lead section a bit to hopefully be clearer to a general audience (people with more expertise than I have are welcome to rework that further).
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This strongly depends on the used computer architecture and the used basic algorithms (integer multiplication, linear algebra, ...). So, I doubt that any reliable encyclopedic answer can be provided.
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Probably not. I'm not up to date on this. But it may give a rough idea. It could be in there with the date of the statement, and note that things change, and it depends on other factors.
1688:: would it have killed anyone to explain the word "lemniscates" with "(e.g., figure-eights)" rather than make maybe 90% of readers click through if they want to understand what is being said? 3255:, has been undergoing major changes this month from a couple of editors whose names I don't recognize. Might be for the better, I'm not sure, but could at least benefit from some checking. — 2047:"are writing to teach the material to someone who is at the level in mathematics to be able to understand the relevant concept, theorem, etc., but to whom this particular material is new" 1194: 1190: 1186: 1182: 1178: 1174: 1170: 1166: 1162: 1151: 1143: 1139: 1135: 1131: 1127: 1123: 1119: 1115: 1111: 1107: 1092: 1088: 1084: 1080: 1076: 1072: 1068: 1064: 1060: 1056: 1052: 1048: 1037: 1033: 1029: 1025: 1021: 1017: 1013: 1009: 1005: 1001: 997: 993: 982: 978: 974: 970: 966: 962: 958: 954: 950: 946: 942: 938: 927: 923: 919: 915: 911: 907: 903: 899: 895: 891: 887: 883: 872: 868: 864: 860: 856: 852: 848: 844: 840: 836: 832: 828: 817: 813: 809: 805: 801: 797: 793: 789: 785: 781: 777: 773: 762: 758: 754: 750: 746: 742: 738: 734: 730: 726: 722: 718: 707: 703: 699: 695: 691: 687: 683: 679: 675: 671: 667: 663: 652: 648: 644: 640: 636: 632: 628: 624: 620: 616: 612: 608: 597: 593: 589: 585: 581: 577: 573: 569: 565: 561: 557: 553: 542: 538: 534: 530: 526: 522: 518: 514: 510: 506: 502: 498: 487: 483: 479: 475: 471: 467: 463: 459: 455: 451: 447: 443: 432: 428: 424: 420: 416: 412: 408: 404: 400: 396: 392: 388: 377: 373: 369: 365: 361: 357: 353: 349: 345: 341: 337: 333: 322: 318: 314: 310: 306: 302: 298: 294: 290: 286: 282: 278: 267: 263: 259: 255: 251: 247: 243: 239: 235: 231: 227: 223: 212: 208: 204: 200: 196: 192: 188: 184: 180: 176: 172: 168: 157: 153: 149: 145: 141: 137: 133: 129: 125: 121: 117: 113: 4776:
That's the right idea, but the more idiomatic phrase (maybe 2.5x more popular in Google Scholar) is "factorization algorithm" (singular because that's what Knowledge tends to do). —
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are encofstulated.". I don't think that prerequisites are the answer, but I do think that dropping the idea of compressing everything ever tighter again and again, and instead just
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lists a lot of algorithms. I think it should say what algorithms are the most practical. Somewhere (I couldn't find it again) I read that Shanks's SQUFOF is clearly the best for
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there -- I think it was helpful that along the way I was repeatedly pushed to keep writing the introduction in a more and more gentle way, well beyond what I thought possible. --
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More accessible explanations near the front, some historical discussion, possibly an example or two, and some explicit comparison of various methods wouldn't necessarily make
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territory. I don't find that argument fully convincing — maybe there's a perfect balance to be discovered — but I've never seen it described in adequate detail. Regards,
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This is going to be a difficult AFC review for whoever picks it up. I've given the article creator a few tips and pointers, but some help from others would not go amiss.
4625:, what did you have in mind? You can always try adding the information you are looking for to the article. Or if you propose something concrete maybe others can help. – 102: 98: 94: 90: 4396: 4357: 3202: 3170: 3143: 1572: 4823:
6. Choose the best algorithm for the size of the number. Quadratic Sieve is fastest for 50-100 digits and Number Field Sieve is fastest for more than 100 digits.
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our explanations as clear as possible, and by linking to sources and resources that will help readers learn more and then appreciate the value and beauty of maths.
2022: 4848: 4452:. This seems to be due to the addition of Template:Technical to the article, but I wonder if it helps with accessibility. By the way, nominating some articles to 2302: 2282: 2262: 2242: 2198: 2171: 2151: 21: 49: 3148:
Oh, I thought you had a script. Maybe someone can figure out how to automate this. (I could probably, but I'm not feeling super motivated to try right now.) –
1528:. I am not vary familiar with all the wikipedia procedures, but instead of going through an edit war, wouldn't there be a way to block this editor outright? 2244:. I had to read it twice myself, and it states a fact that I knew perfectly well. It could be clarified by writing (for example) "In other words, each point 3127: 1399: 3131: 3829: 1309:. It is more of an attestation that the event took place than a reference itself. You could link to the review paper as the source of the claim. -- 4550:, or something a little bigger than that; that Quadratic Sieve was best for some range, and that something else was better for some other range. 4371: 1705:
usefully says, at the end of the lede, "The study of manifolds requires working knowledge of calculus and topology." The is is the sort of thing
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available to you, so you can look up an individual fact quickly if you need it, or find a path through it to learn it if that's your goal. --
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is definitely on my list of pages to eventually dramatically expand. It's a bit tricky to figure out how to organize because there is
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Is that ten-year-old comparison still accurate, though? As of a different 2011 comparison the crossover was more like in the low 90s
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Regarding "how to", it shouldn't have the name "how to factor an integer", but something like "method to factor an integer". Also,
2010: 1619: 1395: 3809: 3114:, how much trouble would it be to get a similar view count for all of the math wikiproject articles of top/high(/mid) priority? – 3076: 2887: 2825: 2524: 2433: 1464: 2990: 2445: 4151: 4123: 1488: 1492: 3869: 1522:
https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Intersection_(set_theory)&curid=23476429&diff=1183967074&oldid=1182504792
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more interested in what the theorem says than how, exactly, it is proved. Conversely, in the generally good lede of
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says that it is best for integers over 100 digits. So what are the approximate range where each is the best?
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which has helped to revise and navigate better in between history articles related to physics. I started a
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Now, this isn't what I do because I always check for some small factors before a primality test, etc.
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also makes text hard to read but we should avoid piling on one problem to fix another. In some cases a
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Just revert the edit and leave a message on their talk page. If they do it again they can be banned. –
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four intervening paragraphs, which I assume attempt to prepare one for the definition, do not do so.
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As a small aside, I'm curious about these potential readers who know topology but not calculus.... --
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of which the first half is more or less "let's make every analogy of every proposition we can from
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Is there a category for history of nomenclature and are there articles on history of nomenclature
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Okay, here's a sorted list of all the top/high priority articles with more than 700 daily views:
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I seriously thought about starting by writing a section that summarized Book 3 of Euclid....
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These are areas that deserve links to existing articles but not lengthy expositions here. --
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to learn the material in any depth but is interested in finding out what it might be about (
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There are also individual articles on notation, or sometimes on the history of notation, in
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has an extremely dated reference to Algebra; Abstract Algebra deals with more than numbers.
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3. Trial division first, then ECM with a small bound and increase the bound, if necessary
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There is a conflict between your first and second points here IMO. If it is true that we
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is the only contribution from a particular editor and is an obvious case of vandalism of
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seems particularly lackluster: many bulleted lists instead of prose, few references.
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I could not find the reference the Conley (1984) in this article. What should I do ?
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may be more useful than adding maintenance templates to the top of the articles. --
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Talk:Mathematical modelling of infectious diseases#Requested move 30 October 2023
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Talk:Mathematical modelling of infectious diseases#Requested move 30 October 2023
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Or let's take a couple of sentences in the (generally decently written) article
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We might want to create a template which, in the session, we jokingly called
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Highest-view articles that are concrete math concepts per se are apparently
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I think it would be good to have an article about how to factor an integer.
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the Yoneda lemma is arguably the most important result in category theory.
4681:. Later posts in the same thread put the crossover at around 100 again. — 4679: 4163: 4111: 4041: 3981: 3913: 3901: 3893: 3873: 3845: 3813: 3741: 3529: 3513: 3036: 2994: 2882: 2858: 2777: 2766: 2687: 2572: 1685: 3177:
There's apparently an existing tool. So that's convenient. For example,
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Good question. Long enough that I'm not going to try by hand; there are
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and since then some NSF implementations have had significant speedups
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Masters, it appeared to be a pretty universally shared experience. -
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to say and so many relevant sources. For inspiration take a look at
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5. Remember that Pollard Rho and ECM may not find factors in order
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projects, because the page is written in a pretty inaccessible way.
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If anyone wants ideas for what to improve first, I took the "
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Are there such articles, or a category to assign them to. --
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III on the sphere". I'm still not quite ready to expand the
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The biggest error that we make on Knowledge in this area is
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belongs to every one of its neighbourhoods with respect to
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a subject, would avoid the "leaving out detail" problem.
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Thank you for your advice ! Thanks to you, I fixed it. --
3251:
One of those high-viewcount and high-priority articles,
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that may be of interest to members of this WikiProject.
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What are the approximate range where each is the best?
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Thanks for organizing the list this way. The article
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One of the two (Phlsph7) is responsible for bringing
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Arithmetic#Definition, etymology, and related fields
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As to the second point, I think that while Jmabel's
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During the Q&A of one of the lightning talks at
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Making mathematical articles more broadly accessible
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Metz Username:Chatul 1406:that it listed on GAN before I nominate 1398:, it does not list one featured article 1365:There is a requested move discussion at 4724:I tried to make the first paragraph of 4577:isn't currently the best thing to do. 4372:A Treatise on the Circle and the Sphere 3044:Probability and statistics (2 articles) 2400: 2180:"In other words, each point of the set 88: 4592: 4586: 4553:Can someone add that to the article? 4449: 2601:, not on this list, which has 248,145) 2046: 1978:I can appreciate the motivation for a 1926: 1400:Quine–Putnam indispensability argument 18:Knowledge talk:WikiProject Mathematics 4849:WikiProject Mathematics archives/2023 1737:Knowledge:Knowledge is not a textbook 1259:Draft:Template:History of mathematics 7: 2616: 2542: 3305:is too narrow, e.g., no mention of 2871:Geometry and topology (12 articles) 2304:'s) neighbourhoods with respect to 1579:If it continues, you can report to 1473:A History of Mathematical Notations 2492:Counting and numbers (12 articles) 45:WikiProject Mathematics archives ( 32: 4752:tells you "how to" find the GCD. 3922:Kepler's laws of planetary motion 1236:may be automatically archived by 3810:Cumulative distribution function 3065: 3060: 3049: 3031: 3026: 3013: 3002: 2989: 2984: 2973: 2962: 2949: 2938: 2927: 2922: 2909: 2904: 2893: 2876: 2853: 2842: 2831: 2814: 2794: 2783: 2772: 2761: 2756: 2745: 2740: 2722: 2711: 2706: 2693: 2682: 2671: 2666: 2646: 2641: 2630: 2615: 2604: 2589: 2578: 2567: 2554: 2541: 2530: 2513: 2508: 2497: 2477: 2466: 2455: 2444: 2439: 2420: 2415: 1465:history of mathematical notation 1463:We do have an article about the 1307:The Conley Conjecture and Beyond 38: 4444:Regarding the lead sentence of 4152:Inverse trigonometric functions 4124:Fundamental theorem of calculus 3966:Gödel's incompleteness theorems 1759:Gödel's incompleteness theorems 1677:Gödel's incompleteness theorems 1489:Category:History of mathematics 3578:More than 1.5k views per day: 2321:{\displaystyle {\mathcal {N}}} 2217:{\displaystyle {\mathcal {N}}} 2177:" (we might even omit "also")? 1493:Category:Mathematical notation 1: 4835:22:22, 25 November 2023 (UTC) 4805:Summarizing Wagstaff's tips: 4796:21:53, 25 November 2023 (UTC) 4786:08:04, 25 November 2023 (UTC) 4772:05:39, 25 November 2023 (UTC) 4757:03:09, 21 November 2023 (UTC) 4501:17:18, 18 November 2023 (UTC) 4483:17:05, 18 November 2023 (UTC) 4466:16:42, 18 November 2023 (UTC) 4425:06:14, 20 November 2023 (UTC) 4397:05:50, 20 November 2023 (UTC) 4383:04:23, 20 November 2023 (UTC) 4358:03:18, 20 November 2023 (UTC) 4340:18:45, 19 November 2023 (UTC) 4252:Partial differential equation 4054:More than 700 views per day: 3978:Maximum likelihood estimation 3344:17:21, 18 November 2023 (UTC) 3324:15:23, 20 November 2023 (UTC) 3282:07:45, 18 November 2023 (UTC) 3265:07:32, 18 November 2023 (UTC) 3247:23:48, 17 November 2023 (UTC) 3203:23:44, 17 November 2023 (UTC) 3189:23:38, 17 November 2023 (UTC) 3171:23:31, 17 November 2023 (UTC) 3156:23:23, 17 November 2023 (UTC) 3144:23:21, 17 November 2023 (UTC) 3122:23:14, 17 November 2023 (UTC) 3106:22:56, 17 November 2023 (UTC) 2385:23:09, 17 November 2023 (UTC) 2367:08:46, 17 November 2023 (UTC) 2346:05:18, 17 November 2023 (UTC) 2284:belongs to every one of its ( 2112:11:07, 17 November 2023 (UTC) 2094:10:29, 17 November 2023 (UTC) 2072:22:35, 16 November 2023 (UTC) 2039:00:43, 16 November 2023 (UTC) 2023:08:24, 15 November 2023 (UTC) 1974:01:36, 15 November 2023 (UTC) 1949:23:30, 14 November 2023 (UTC) 1914:23:18, 14 November 2023 (UTC) 1848:04:37, 17 November 2023 (UTC) 1834:22:14, 14 November 2023 (UTC) 1817:02:07, 15 November 2023 (UTC) 1795:21:53, 14 November 2023 (UTC) 1749:21:33, 14 November 2023 (UTC) 1729:20:32, 14 November 2023 (UTC) 1651:09:42, 17 November 2023 (UTC) 1636:22:58, 14 November 2023 (UTC) 4737:23:47, 5 November 2023 (UTC) 4700:00:48, 6 November 2023 (UTC) 4691:23:18, 5 November 2023 (UTC) 4671:22:30, 5 November 2023 (UTC) 4655:22:15, 5 November 2023 (UTC) 4633:14:46, 5 November 2023 (UTC) 4609:11:35, 5 November 2023 (UTC) 4582:01:06, 5 November 2023 (UTC) 4572:05:06, 1 November 2023 (UTC) 4558:17:54, 30 October 2023 (UTC) 3712:More than 1k views per day: 3708:Probability density function 3648:Entropy (information theory) 3640:Singular value decomposition 3574:Eigenvalues and eigenvectors 3550:Principal component analysis 3468:More than 2k views per day: 3390:More than 3k views per day: 3355:More than 5k views per day: 2153:to be empty." Why not just " 1663:WikiConference North America 1593:18:07, 9 November 2023 (UTC) 1573:05:50, 9 November 2023 (UTC) 1551:05:47, 9 November 2023 (UTC) 1538:05:39, 9 November 2023 (UTC) 1509:19:34, 8 November 2023 (UTC) 1483:16:38, 8 November 2023 (UTC) 1458:13:14, 8 November 2023 (UTC) 1431:00:33, 5 November 2023 (UTC) 1385:08:09, 4 November 2023 (UTC) 1343:13:52, 1 November 2023 (UTC) 1322:05:41, 30 October 2023 (UTC) 1300:01:41, 30 October 2023 (UTC) 1279:12:22, 1 November 2023 (UTC) 4543:{\displaystyle n<2^{64}} 3850:Cartesian coordinate system 3704:Spherical coordinate system 1641:I'd be happy to review it. 1263:Template:History of physics 1255:Template:History of physics 4865: 4817:4. Parallelize if you can 4811:2. Look for small factors 4565:General number field sieve 3970:Discrete Fourier transform 2078:Distribution (mathematics) 1249:Help with history template 3870:Cauchy–Schwarz inequality 3834:Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz 3412:E (mathematical constant) 3334:to FA status recently. -- 1605:Draft:Mal'cev's criterion 1526:Intersection (set theory) 4308:Euler's totient function 4002:Probability distribution 3858:Student's t-distribution 3778:Chi-squared distribution 3526:Exponential distribution 3303:Arithmetic#Number theory 3229:Exponential distribution 2597:- 241,262 (compare with 4762:"factoring algorithms" 4750:greatest common divisor 4240:Greatest common divisor 4204:Polar coordinate system 3794:Trigonometric functions 3676:Navier–Stokes equations 3448:Newton's laws of motion 3132:244 "top-priority" ones 3088:Also in this range are 3008:Three-dimensional space 2809:Arithmetic (4 articles) 1599:New editor with a draft 1517:How to handle vandalism 1253:I recently created the 4544: 4489:affine symmetric group 4196:Liberal arts education 4064:Directed acyclic graph 3950:Accuracy and precision 3818:Function (mathematics) 3718:Fast Fourier transform 3297:transcendental numbers 3269:The previous state of 2322: 2298: 2278: 2258: 2238: 2218: 2194: 2167: 2147: 1735:links is veering into 1362: 1239:Lowercase sigmabot III 4726:integer factorization 4664:integer factorization 4615:integer factorization 4545: 4515:integer factorization 4509:Integer factorization 4224:Principia Mathematica 4060:Riemann zeta function 4014:Differential equation 3890:Fermat's Last Theorem 3722:Matrix multiplication 3632:Central limit theorem 3612:Conway's Game of Life 2751:Mathematical analysis 2735:Analysis (5 articles) 2323: 2299: 2279: 2259: 2239: 2219: 2195: 2168: 2148: 1413:Also, in the article 1361: 4660:The Joy of Factoring 4521: 4192:Information security 4168:Gaussian elimination 4120:Integration by parts 4076:Quantum field theory 4022:Law of large numbers 4010:Discrete mathematics 3734:Carl Friedrich Gauss 3696:Exponential function 3692:Dirac delta function 3562:Matrix (mathematics) 3494:Theory of relativity 3432:John Forbes Nash Jr. 3428:Poisson distribution 3286:I still see issues: 3213:Poisson distribution 2661:Algebra (5 articles) 2410:General (5 articles) 2308: 2288: 2268: 2248: 2228: 2204: 2184: 2157: 2137: 2133:"Here we also allow 4272:Euclidean algorithm 4208:Likelihood function 4156:Field (mathematics) 4018:Lagrange multiplier 3770:P versus NP problem 3762:Confidence interval 3714:Regression analysis 3570:Maxwell's equations 3478:Pythagorean theorem 3377:Normal distribution 3365:Srinivasa Ramanujan 1994:Infobox philosopher 1557:first-level warning 4540: 4417:article though.) – 4296:Divergence theorem 4292:Euclidean geometry 4188:Mean value theorem 4180:Stochastic process 4140:Information theory 4132:Bayesian inference 4092:Linear programming 4034:Modular arithmetic 3898:Special relativity 3878:Euclidean distance 3822:Norm (mathematics) 3806:Prisoner's dilemma 3766:Collatz conjecture 3754:Quadratic equation 3636:Riemann hypothesis 3616:General relativity 3596:Monte Carlo method 3534:Gamma distribution 3444:Fibonacci sequence 3392:Standard deviation 3233:Gamma distribution 3221:Fibonacci sequence 2461:Mathematical proof 2318: 2294: 2274: 2254: 2234: 2214: 2190: 2163: 2143: 2076:Just a comment on 1404:Earth–Moon problem 1396:recognized content 1363: 1351:Requested move at 4260:Orthogonal matrix 4220:First-order logic 4176:Irrational number 4088:Russell's paradox 4038:Set (mathematics) 3954:Logistic function 3826:Natural logarithm 3688:Laplace transform 3624:Linear regression 3588:Quadratic formula 3460:Fourier transform 3408:Quantum mechanics 3307:Gaussian integers 3090:Quadratic formula 3085: 3084: 2297:{\displaystyle x} 2277:{\displaystyle X} 2257:{\displaystyle x} 2237:{\displaystyle X} 2193:{\displaystyle X} 2166:{\displaystyle X} 2146:{\displaystyle X} 2127:Topological space 2004:Infobox scientist 1836: 1440:I was looking at 1402:, and GA nominee 1383: 1285:Conley conjecture 1246: 1245: 95:Nov 2002–Dec 2003 4856: 4549: 4547: 4546: 4541: 4539: 4538: 4216:Taylor's theorem 4072:Laplace operator 4068:Grigori Perelman 4006:L'Hôpital's rule 3986:Euler's identity 3934:Nash equilibrium 3882:Geometric series 3802:Student's t-test 3680:Sigmoid function 3592:Chi-squared test 3580:Butterfly effect 3490:Bertrand Russell 3456:John von Neumann 3069: 3068: 3064: 3053: 3035: 3034: 3030: 3017: 3006: 2993: 2988: 2977: 2966: 2953: 2942: 2931: 2930: 2926: 2913: 2912: 2908: 2897: 2880: 2857: 2846: 2835: 2818: 2798: 2787: 2776: 2765: 2764: 2760: 2749: 2748: 2744: 2728:Abstract algebra 2726: 2715: 2714: 2710: 2697: 2686: 2675: 2674: 2670: 2650: 2649: 2645: 2634: 2619: 2618: 2608: 2593: 2582: 2571: 2562: 2558: 2549: 2545: 2544: 2534: 2517: 2516: 2512: 2501: 2481: 2470: 2459: 2448: 2443: 2424: 2423: 2419: 2402:Extended content 2398: 2327: 2325: 2324: 2319: 2317: 2316: 2303: 2301: 2300: 2295: 2283: 2281: 2280: 2275: 2263: 2261: 2260: 2255: 2243: 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function 3510:René Descartes 3466: 3416:Roman numerals 3396:Bayes' theorem 3388: 3353: 3350: 3349: 3348: 3347: 3346: 3328: 3327: 3326: 3312: 3311: 3310: 3300: 3295:No mention of 3293: 3257:David Eppstein 3237:Gamma function 3209:Roman numerals 3205: 3175: 3174: 3173: 3083: 3082: 3081: 3080: 3058: 3045: 3042: 3041: 3040: 3024: 3023: 3022: 3011: 3000: 2999: 2998: 2971: 2960: 2959: 2958: 2936: 2920: 2919: 2918: 2872: 2869: 2868: 2867: 2866: 2865: 2851: 2840: 2837:Exponentiation 2810: 2807: 2806: 2805: 2804: 2803: 2792: 2781: 2770: 2736: 2733: 2732: 2731: 2720: 2717:Linear algebra 2704: 2703: 2702: 2691: 2662: 2659: 2658: 2657: 2656: 2655: 2639: 2636:Complex number 2628: 2627: 2626: 2625: 2624: 2613: 2610:Natural number 2602: 2576: 2565: 2552: 2506: 2493: 2490: 2489: 2488: 2487: 2486: 2475: 2464: 2453: 2411: 2408: 2405: 2404: 2401: 2396: 2392:Vital articles 2388: 2387: 2369: 2359:David Eppstein 2330: 2329: 2315: 2293: 2273: 2253: 2233: 2211: 2189: 2178: 2162: 2142: 2119: 2118: 2117: 2116: 2115: 2114: 2081: 2056: 2043: 2042: 2041: 2026: 2025: 1976: 1961: 1953: 1952: 1951: 1941:David Eppstein 1932: 1931: 1930: 1917: 1916: 1854: 1853: 1852: 1851: 1850: 1821: 1820: 1819: 1767: 1757:(the intro to 1718: 1717: 1689: 1672: 1658: 1655: 1654: 1653: 1624: 1623: 1607: 1600: 1597: 1596: 1595: 1577: 1576: 1575: 1518: 1515: 1514: 1513: 1512: 1511: 1501:David Eppstein 1469:Florian Cajori 1437: 1434: 1408:Square pyramid 1391: 1388: 1355: 1349: 1348: 1347: 1346: 1345: 1287: 1282: 1267:complex number 1250: 1247: 1244: 1243: 1231: 1228: 1227: 1222: 1218: 1216: 1213: 1212: 1210: 1209: 1154: 1098: 1096: 1095: 1040: 985: 930: 875: 820: 765: 710: 655: 600: 545: 490: 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: 4861: 4850: 4847: 4846: 4844: 4837: 4836: 4833: 4828: 4824: 4821: 4818: 4815: 4812: 4809: 4806: 4797: 4794: 4789: 4788: 4787: 4783: 4779: 4775: 4774: 4773: 4769: 4765: 4761: 4760: 4759: 4758: 4755: 4751: 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4193: 4189: 4185: 4184:Heat equation 4181: 4177: 4173: 4169: 4165: 4161: 4157: 4153: 4149: 4145: 4141: 4137: 4136:Number theory 4133: 4129: 4125: 4121: 4117: 4113: 4109: 4105: 4101: 4097: 4093: 4089: 4085: 4081: 4077: 4073: 4069: 4065: 4061: 4057: 4053: 4051: 4047: 4043: 4039: 4035: 4031: 4027: 4023: 4019: 4015: 4011: 4007: 4003: 3999: 3995: 3991: 3987: 3983: 3979: 3975: 3971: 3967: 3963: 3962:Hilbert space 3959: 3955: 3951: 3947: 3943: 3939: 3938:Data analysis 3935: 3931: 3927: 3923: 3919: 3915: 3911: 3910:Roger Penrose 3907: 3903: 3899: 3895: 3891: 3887: 3883: 3879: 3875: 3871: 3867: 3863: 3859: 3855: 3851: 3847: 3843: 3839: 3835: 3831: 3827: 3823: 3819: 3815: 3811: 3807: 3803: 3799: 3795: 3791: 3787: 3783: 3782:Blaise Pascal 3779: 3775: 3771: 3767: 3763: 3759: 3755: 3751: 3747: 3743: 3739: 3735: 3731: 3727: 3723: 3719: 3715: 3711: 3709: 3705: 3701: 3697: 3693: 3689: 3685: 3681: 3677: 3673: 3669: 3665: 3661: 3657: 3653: 3649: 3645: 3641: 3637: 3633: 3629: 3625: 3621: 3617: 3613: 3609: 3605: 3601: 3597: 3593: 3589: 3585: 3581: 3577: 3575: 3571: 3567: 3563: 3559: 3555: 3551: 3547: 3543: 3539: 3535: 3531: 3527: 3523: 3519: 3515: 3511: 3507: 3503: 3499: 3495: 3491: 3487: 3483: 3479: 3475: 3471: 3467: 3465: 3461: 3457: 3453: 3452:Taylor series 3449: 3445: 3441: 3437: 3433: 3429: 3425: 3421: 3417: 3413: 3409: 3405: 3401: 3397: 3393: 3389: 3386: 3382: 3378: 3374: 3370: 3366: 3362: 3358: 3354: 3351: 3345: 3341: 3337: 3333: 3329: 3325: 3321: 3317: 3313: 3308: 3304: 3301: 3298: 3294: 3291: 3288: 3287: 3285: 3284: 3283: 3280: 3277: 3272: 3268: 3267: 3266: 3262: 3258: 3254: 3250: 3249: 3248: 3245: 3242: 3238: 3234: 3230: 3226: 3225:Taylor series 3222: 3218: 3214: 3210: 3206: 3204: 3200: 3196: 3192: 3191: 3190: 3187: 3184: 3180: 3176: 3172: 3168: 3164: 3159: 3158: 3157: 3154: 3151: 3147: 3146: 3145: 3141: 3137: 3133: 3129: 3125: 3124: 3123: 3120: 3117: 3113: 3110: 3109: 3108: 3107: 3103: 3099: 3095: 3091: 3078: 3074: 3073: 3063: 3059: 3056: 3052: 3048: 3047: 3043: 3038: 3029: 3025: 3020: 3016: 3012: 3009: 3005: 3001: 2996: 2992: 2987: 2983: 2982: 2980: 2976: 2972: 2969: 2965: 2961: 2956: 2952: 2948: 2947: 2945: 2944:Conic section 2941: 2937: 2934: 2925: 2921: 2916: 2907: 2903: 2902: 2900: 2896: 2892: 2891: 2889: 2885: 2884: 2879: 2875: 2874: 2870: 2863: 2861: 2856: 2852: 2849: 2845: 2841: 2838: 2834: 2830: 2829: 2827: 2823: 2822: 2817: 2813: 2812: 2808: 2801: 2797: 2793: 2790: 2786: 2782: 2779: 2775: 2771: 2768: 2759: 2755: 2754: 2752: 2743: 2739: 2738: 2734: 2729: 2725: 2721: 2718: 2709: 2705: 2700: 2696: 2692: 2689: 2685: 2681: 2680: 2678: 2669: 2665: 2664: 2660: 2653: 2652:Number theory 2644: 2640: 2637: 2633: 2629: 2622: 2614: 2611: 2607: 2603: 2600: 2596: 2592: 2588: 2587: 2585: 2581: 2577: 2574: 2570: 2566: 2563: 2557: 2553: 2550: 2540: 2539: 2537: 2533: 2529: 2528: 2526: 2522: 2521: 2511: 2507: 2504: 2503:Combinatorics 2500: 2496: 2495: 2491: 2484: 2480: 2476: 2473: 2469: 2465: 2462: 2458: 2454: 2451: 2447: 2442: 2438: 2437: 2435: 2431: 2430: 2429: 2418: 2414: 2413: 2409: 2407: 2406: 2399: 2395: 2393: 2386: 2383: 2380: 2375: 2370: 2368: 2364: 2360: 2355: 2350: 2349: 2348: 2347: 2344: 2340: 2334: 2291: 2271: 2251: 2231: 2187: 2179: 2176: 2160: 2140: 2132: 2131: 2130: 2128: 2123: 2113: 2110: 2104: 2097: 2096: 2095: 2091: 2087: 2082: 2079: 2075: 2074: 2073: 2070: 2064: 2057: 2053: 2048: 2044: 2040: 2037: 2036: 2030: 2029: 2028: 2027: 2024: 2020: 2016: 2012: 2009:, which were 2005: 1995: 1984: 1983:Prerequisites 1977: 1975: 1971: 1967: 1962: 1959: 1954: 1950: 1946: 1942: 1938: 1933: 1929: 1925: 1924: 1921: 1920: 1919: 1918: 1915: 1911: 1907: 1903: 1899: 1896: 1893: 1889: 1886: 1882: 1879: 1876: 1872: 1867: 1863: 1859: 1858:summary style 1855: 1849: 1846: 1842: 1838: 1837: 1835: 1831: 1827: 1822: 1818: 1815: 1812: 1807: 1803: 1798: 1797: 1796: 1792: 1788: 1784: 1776: 1768: 1764: 1760: 1756: 1752: 1751: 1750: 1746: 1742: 1738: 1733: 1732: 1731: 1730: 1727: 1723: 1711: 1710:Prerequisites 1704: 1697: 1696:Prerequisites 1690: 1687: 1683: 1678: 1673: 1669: 1668: 1667: 1664: 1656: 1652: 1648: 1644: 1640: 1639: 1638: 1637: 1633: 1629: 1621: 1618: 1615: 1611: 1608: 1606: 1603: 1602: 1598: 1594: 1590: 1586: 1582: 1578: 1574: 1570: 1566: 1562: 1558: 1554: 1553: 1552: 1549: 1546: 1542: 1541: 1540: 1539: 1535: 1531: 1527: 1523: 1516: 1510: 1506: 1502: 1498: 1494: 1490: 1486: 1485: 1484: 1481: 1478: 1474: 1470: 1466: 1462: 1461: 1460: 1459: 1455: 1451: 1446: 1443: 1435: 1433: 1432: 1428: 1424: 1420: 1416: 1415:Fleiss' kappa 1411: 1409: 1405: 1401: 1397: 1390:Two questions 1389: 1387: 1386: 1381: 1377: 1376: 1375: 1368: 1360: 1354: 1350: 1344: 1340: 1336: 1330: 1325: 1324: 1323: 1318: 1314: 1308: 1304: 1303: 1302: 1301: 1297: 1293: 1286: 1283: 1281: 1280: 1276: 1272: 1268: 1264: 1260: 1256: 1248: 1240: 1235: 1230: 1229: 1215: 1214: 1208: 1204: 1200: 1196: 1192: 1188: 1184: 1180: 1176: 1172: 1168: 1164: 1160: 1159: 1155: 1153: 1149: 1145: 1141: 1137: 1133: 1129: 1125: 1121: 1117: 1113: 1109: 1105: 1104: 1100: 1099: 1094: 1090: 1086: 1082: 1078: 1074: 1070: 1066: 1062: 1058: 1054: 1050: 1046: 1045: 1041: 1039: 1035: 1031: 1027: 1023: 1019: 1015: 1011: 1007: 1003: 999: 995: 991: 990: 986: 984: 980: 976: 972: 968: 964: 960: 956: 952: 948: 944: 940: 936: 935: 931: 929: 925: 921: 917: 913: 909: 905: 901: 897: 893: 889: 885: 881: 880: 876: 874: 870: 866: 862: 858: 854: 850: 846: 842: 838: 834: 830: 826: 825: 821: 819: 815: 811: 807: 803: 799: 795: 791: 787: 783: 779: 775: 771: 770: 766: 764: 760: 756: 752: 748: 744: 740: 736: 732: 728: 724: 720: 716: 715: 711: 709: 705: 701: 697: 693: 689: 685: 681: 677: 673: 669: 665: 661: 660: 656: 654: 650: 646: 642: 638: 634: 630: 626: 622: 618: 614: 610: 606: 605: 601: 599: 595: 591: 587: 583: 579: 575: 571: 567: 563: 559: 555: 551: 550: 546: 544: 540: 536: 532: 528: 524: 520: 516: 512: 508: 504: 500: 496: 495: 491: 489: 485: 481: 477: 473: 469: 465: 461: 457: 453: 449: 445: 441: 440: 436: 434: 430: 426: 422: 418: 414: 410: 406: 402: 398: 394: 390: 386: 385: 381: 379: 375: 371: 367: 363: 359: 355: 351: 347: 343: 339: 335: 331: 330: 326: 324: 320: 316: 312: 308: 304: 300: 296: 292: 288: 284: 280: 276: 275: 271: 269: 265: 261: 257: 253: 249: 245: 241: 237: 233: 229: 225: 221: 220: 216: 214: 210: 206: 202: 198: 194: 190: 186: 182: 178: 174: 170: 166: 165: 161: 159: 155: 151: 147: 143: 139: 135: 131: 127: 123: 119: 115: 111: 110: 106: 104: 100: 96: 92: 89: 85:Earlier years 81: 80: 77: 76: 72: 67: 62: 60: 55: 53: 48: 47: 41: 36: 35: 27: 23: 19: 4829: 4825: 4822: 4819: 4816: 4813: 4810: 4807: 4804: 4747: 4659: 4552: 4513:The article 4512: 4446:Yoneda lemma 4443: 4414: 4410: 4405: 4404:Theodosius' 4370: 4366: 4280:Power of two 4244:Omar Khayyam 4096:Eratosthenes 3998:Vector space 3994:Graph theory 3958:Fields Medal 3942:Trigonometry 3838:Cryptography 3746:Markov chain 3738:Data science 3584:Chaos theory 3436:Golden ratio 3420:Prime number 3361:Isaac Newton 3217:Golden ratio 3087: 3070: 2915:Trigonometry 2881: 2859: 2819: 2621:Prime number 2518: 2436:) - 149,119 2426: 2425: 2389: 2357:manifolds. — 2354:single level 2353: 2335: 2331: 2124: 2120: 2052:Distribution 2035:Geometry guy 2033: 1957: 1901: 1870: 1865: 1861: 1802:WP:TECHNICAL 1762: 1754: 1720:Thoughts? - 1719: 1681: 1660: 1625: 1616: 1520: 1472: 1447: 1439: 1412: 1393: 1372: 1371: 1364: 1289: 1252: 1233: 1156: 1147: 1101: 1042: 987: 932: 877: 822: 767: 712: 657: 602: 547: 492: 437: 382: 327: 272: 217: 162: 107: 103:Sep–Dec 2004 99:Jan–Aug 2004 44: 4597:WP:NOTHOWTO 4458:SilverMatsu 4256:Brahmagupta 4200:Combination 4116:Permutation 4056:Probability 3918:Correlation 3854:Square root 3842:Real number 3726:Determinant 3554:Game theory 3546:Dot product 3506:Information 3404:Mathematics 3055:Probability 2890:) - 42,034 2828:) - 21,069 2536:Real number 2527:) - 70,474 2428:Mathematics 2264:of the set 1902:introducing 1864:; not be a 1610:JesseStraat 1495:. Example: 1445:be useful. 1335:SilverMatsu 1329:Mark viking 1313:Mark viking 1292:SilverMatsu 4666:article. 4448:, it says 4389:XOR'easter 4350:XOR'easter 4324:Arithmetic 4248:Divergence 4050:Set theory 4046:Chain rule 4026:Paul Dirac 3974:Polynomial 3886:Kurt Gödel 3790:Covariance 3652:Derivative 3628:Statistics 3486:Pythagoras 3424:Archimedes 3271:arithmetic 3253:arithmetic 3195:XOR'easter 3163:XOR'easter 3136:XOR'easter 3112:XOR'easter 3098:XOR'easter 3092:(70,039), 3079:) - 51,094 3072:Statistics 2821:Arithmetic 2050:instance, 2015:XOR'easter 1937:WP:ONEDOWN 1866:Britannica 1766:happening. 1565:XOR'easter 1423:Dedhert.Jr 1374:Polyamorph 91:Motivation 4731:jacobolus 4627:jacobolus 4477:jacobolus 4419:jacobolus 4377:jacobolus 4334:jacobolus 4172:Summation 4128:Dimension 4108:Trapezoid 4100:Fibonacci 4084:Histogram 3930:Factorial 3700:Spacetime 3604:Logarithm 3558:Tesseract 3538:Algorithm 3518:Aryabhata 3385:Aristotle 3276:jacobolus 3241:jacobolus 3183:jacobolus 3150:jacobolus 3116:jacobolus 2981:- 22,187 2946:- 20,720 2901:- 18,884 2848:Logarithm 2753:- 16,889 2679:- 59,303 2623:- 123,187 2586:- 46,072 2564:- 173,469 2551:- 142,557 2538:- 41,579 2450:Algorithm 2379:jacobolus 2374:"be bold" 2175:empty set 2102:ByVarying 2062:ByVarying 1966:Trovatore 1862:introduce 1826:Trovatore 1811:jacobolus 1806:Bijection 1787:Trovatore 1775:technical 1716:calculus. 1703:Manifolds 1545:jacobolus 1530:PatrickR2 1477:jacobolus 4843:Category 4764:—Tamfang 4601:D.Lazard 4415:Spherics 4411:Elements 4406:Spherics 4164:Velocity 4112:Parabola 4042:Manifold 3982:Big data 3914:Topology 3902:Triangle 3894:Momentum 3874:Geometry 3846:Gradient 3814:Infinity 3742:Integral 3530:Calculus 3514:Variance 3057:- 31,176 3039:- 35,479 3037:Topology 3021:- 19,626 3010:- 20,725 2997:- 36,061 2995:Triangle 2957:- 40,105 2935:- 15,529 2917:- 36,550 2883:Geometry 2850:- 67,018 2839:- 31,434 2802:- 15,213 2791:- 25,049 2780:- 45,475 2778:Infinity 2769:- 77,679 2767:Calculus 2730:- 13,047 2719:- 31,252 2699:Variable 2690:- 12,364 2688:Equation 2654:- 26,054 2638:- 53,705 2612:- 51,345 2575:- 20,799 2573:Fraction 2505:- 18,384 2485:- 47,338 2483:Function 2474:- 34,892 2463:- 14,046 2452:- 70,127 2086:D.Lazard 2055:article. 1895:namedrop 1885:namedrop 1875:namedrop 1686:manifold 1643:Felix QW 1620:contribs 1471:'s book 24:‎ | 20:‎ | 4832:Bubba73 4793:Bubba73 4754:Bubba73 4697:Bubba73 4668:Bubba73 4652:Bubba73 4623:Bubba73 4579:Bubba73 4569:Bubba73 4555:Bubba73 4367:so much 4264:Polygon 3990:Ellipse 3750:Integer 3668:Algebra 3474:Physics 3470:Entropy 3077:Level 2 2979:Polygon 2970:- 9,302 2888:Level 2 2864:- 9,462 2862:th root 2826:Level 2 2701:- 8,242 2677:Algebra 2584:Integer 2525:Level 2 2434:Level 1 2377:here. – 2122:words? 1906:Uncle G 1898:jargons 1873:is the 1871:subject 1763:wording 1755:example 1628:Uncle G 1271:ReyHahn 1234:15 days 22:Archive 4487:I got 4472:WP:DYK 4454:WP:DYK 4363:Circle 4346:Circle 4300:Radian 4104:Sphere 3926:Circle 3866:Tensor 3798:Median 3660:Abacus 3620:Euclid 3566:Number 3019:Volume 2955:Circle 2800:Series 2520:Number 2339:Jmabel 1892:jargon 1888:jargon 1881:jargon 1878:jargon 1841:Jmabel 1741:Mgnbar 1722:Jmabel 1581:WP:AIV 4284:Axiom 4148:Tuple 3608:Logic 3332:Logic 2899:Angle 2789:Limit 1890:when 1583:. -- 16:< 4782:talk 4768:talk 4687:talk 4621:But 4605:talk 4595:See 4563:And 4528:< 4497:talk 4462:talk 4393:talk 4354:talk 4212:Mean 3440:Time 3340:talk 3320:talk 3261:talk 3199:talk 3167:talk 3140:talk 3130:and 3102:talk 2968:Line 2933:Area 2363:talk 2343:Talk 2108:talk 2090:talk 2068:talk 2019:talk 1999:and 1970:talk 1958:self 1945:talk 1928:new. 1910:talk 1845:Talk 1830:talk 1791:talk 1745:talk 1726:Talk 1671:new. 1647:talk 1632:talk 1614:talk 1589:talk 1569:talk 1534:talk 1505:talk 1454:talk 1427:talk 1380:talk 1339:talk 1317:Talk 1315:}} { 1311:{{u| 1296:talk 1275:talk 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 26:2023 4734:(t) 4630:(t) 4493:JBL 4480:(t) 4422:(t) 4380:(t) 4375:. – 4337:(t) 3336:JBL 3279:(t) 3244:(t) 3186:(t) 3181:. – 3153:(t) 3119:(t) 2472:Set 2382:(t) 2129:. 1883:of 1814:(t) 1682:lot 1585:JBL 1559:at 1548:(t) 1499:. — 1480:(t) 1475:. – 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 4845:: 4784:) 4770:) 4689:) 4607:) 4599:. 4536:64 4499:) 4464:) 4395:) 4356:) 4326:, 4322:, 4318:, 4314:, 4310:, 4306:, 4302:, 4298:, 4294:, 4290:, 4286:, 4282:, 4278:, 4274:, 4270:, 4266:, 4262:, 4258:, 4254:, 4250:, 4246:, 4242:, 4238:, 4234:, 4230:, 4226:, 4222:, 4218:, 4214:, 4210:, 4206:, 4202:, 4198:, 4194:, 4190:, 4186:, 4182:, 4178:, 4174:, 4170:, 4166:, 4162:, 4158:, 4154:, 4150:, 4146:, 4142:, 4138:, 4134:, 4130:, 4126:, 4122:, 4118:, 4114:, 4110:, 4106:, 4102:, 4098:, 4094:, 4090:, 4086:, 4082:, 4078:, 4074:, 4070:, 4066:, 4062:, 4058:, 4048:, 4044:, 4040:, 4036:, 4032:, 4028:, 4024:, 4020:, 4016:, 4012:, 4008:, 4004:, 4000:, 3996:, 3992:, 3988:, 3984:, 3980:, 3976:, 3972:, 3968:, 3964:, 3960:, 3956:, 3952:, 3948:, 3944:, 3940:, 3936:, 3932:, 3928:, 3924:, 3920:, 3916:, 3912:, 3908:, 3904:, 3900:, 3896:, 3892:, 3888:, 3884:, 3880:, 3876:, 3872:, 3868:, 3864:, 3860:, 3856:, 3852:, 3848:, 3844:, 3840:, 3836:, 3832:, 3828:, 3824:, 3820:, 3816:, 3812:, 3808:, 3804:, 3800:, 3796:, 3792:, 3788:, 3784:, 3780:, 3776:, 3772:, 3768:, 3764:, 3760:, 3756:, 3752:, 3748:, 3744:, 3740:, 3736:, 3732:, 3728:, 3724:, 3720:, 3716:, 3706:, 3702:, 3698:, 3694:, 3690:, 3686:, 3682:, 3678:, 3674:, 3670:, 3666:, 3662:, 3658:, 3654:, 3650:, 3646:, 3642:, 3638:, 3634:, 3630:, 3626:, 3622:, 3618:, 3614:, 3610:, 3606:, 3602:, 3600:10 3598:, 3594:, 3590:, 3586:, 3582:, 3572:, 3568:, 3564:, 3560:, 3556:, 3552:, 3548:, 3544:, 3540:, 3536:, 3532:, 3528:, 3524:, 3520:, 3516:, 3512:, 3508:, 3504:, 3500:, 3496:, 3492:, 3488:, 3484:, 3480:, 3476:, 3472:, 3462:, 3458:, 3454:, 3450:, 3446:, 3442:, 3438:, 3434:, 3430:, 3426:, 3422:, 3418:, 3414:, 3410:, 3406:, 3402:, 3398:, 3394:, 3383:, 3379:, 3375:, 3373:Pi 3371:, 3367:, 3363:, 3359:, 3342:) 3322:) 3263:) 3235:, 3231:, 3227:, 3223:, 3219:, 3215:, 3211:, 3201:) 3169:) 3142:) 3134:. 3104:) 2365:) 2341:| 2328:." 2105:| 2092:) 2065:| 2021:) 2007:}} 2001:{{ 1997:}} 1991:{{ 1986:}} 1980:{{ 1972:) 1947:) 1912:) 1843:| 1832:) 1793:) 1778:}} 1772:{{ 1747:) 1724:| 1713:}} 1707:{{ 1699:}} 1693:{{ 1649:) 1634:) 1591:) 1571:) 1563:. 1536:) 1507:) 1491:+ 1456:) 1429:) 1421:. 1341:) 1298:) 1277:) 1269:. 1205:· 1201:· 1197:· 1193:· 1189:· 1185:· 1181:· 1177:· 1173:· 1169:· 1165:· 1161:: 1150:· 1146:· 1142:· 1138:· 1134:· 1130:· 1126:· 1122:· 1118:· 1114:· 1110:· 1106:: 1091:· 1087:· 1083:· 1079:· 1075:· 1071:· 1067:· 1063:· 1059:· 1055:· 1051:· 1047:: 1036:· 1032:· 1028:· 1024:· 1020:· 1016:· 1012:· 1008:· 1004:· 1000:· 996:· 992:: 981:· 977:· 973:· 969:· 965:· 961:· 957:· 953:· 949:· 945:· 941:· 937:: 926:· 922:· 918:· 914:· 910:· 906:· 902:· 898:· 894:· 890:· 886:· 882:: 871:· 867:· 863:· 859:· 855:· 851:· 847:· 843:· 839:· 835:· 831:· 827:: 816:· 812:· 808:· 804:· 800:· 796:· 792:· 788:· 784:· 780:· 776:· 772:: 761:· 757:· 753:· 749:· 745:· 741:· 737:· 733:· 729:· 725:· 721:· 717:: 706:· 702:· 698:· 694:· 690:· 686:· 682:· 678:· 674:· 670:· 666:· 662:: 651:· 647:· 643:· 639:· 635:· 631:· 627:· 623:· 619:· 615:· 611:· 607:: 596:· 592:· 588:· 584:· 580:· 576:· 572:· 568:· 564:· 560:· 556:· 552:: 541:· 537:· 533:· 529:· 525:· 521:· 517:· 513:· 509:· 505:· 501:· 497:: 486:· 482:· 478:· 474:· 470:· 466:· 462:· 458:· 454:· 450:· 446:· 442:: 431:· 427:· 423:· 419:· 415:· 411:· 407:· 403:· 399:· 395:· 391:· 387:: 376:· 372:· 368:· 364:· 360:· 356:· 352:· 348:· 344:· 340:· 336:· 332:: 321:· 317:· 313:· 309:· 305:· 301:· 297:· 293:· 289:· 285:· 281:· 277:: 266:· 262:· 258:· 254:· 250:· 246:· 242:· 238:· 234:· 230:· 226:· 222:: 211:· 207:· 203:· 199:· 195:· 191:· 187:· 183:· 179:· 175:· 171:· 167:: 156:· 152:· 148:· 144:· 140:· 136:· 132:· 128:· 124:· 120:· 116:· 112:: 101:· 97:· 93:· 4780:( 4766:( 4729:– 4685:( 4603:( 4532:2 4525:n 4495:( 4475:– 4460:( 4391:( 4352:( 4332:– 4080:3 3862:9 3522:6 3502:8 3498:5 3482:4 3464:2 3387:, 3381:1 3369:0 3338:( 3318:( 3309:. 3299:. 3274:– 3259:( 3197:( 3165:( 3138:( 3100:( 3075:( 2886:( 2860:n 2824:( 2599:1 2595:0 2561:π 2548:e 2523:( 2432:( 2361:( 2314:N 2292:x 2272:X 2252:x 2232:X 2210:N 2188:X 2161:X 2141:X 2088:( 2017:( 1968:( 1943:( 1908:( 1869:" 1828:( 1809:– 1789:( 1743:( 1645:( 1630:( 1622:) 1617:· 1612:( 1587:( 1567:( 1532:( 1503:( 1452:( 1425:( 1382:) 1378:( 1337:( 1331:: 1327:@ 1319:} 1294:( 1273:( 1242:. 71:) 65:e 58:t 51:v

Index

Knowledge talk:WikiProject Mathematics
Archive
2023

v
t
e
Motivation
Nov 2002–Dec 2003
Jan–Aug 2004
Sep–Dec 2004
2005
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
2006
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May

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