On Wednesday, June 1, 2016 at 12:07:10 PM UTC-4, Mark Lloyd wrote:
On 05/31/2016 11:55 PM, trader_4 wrote:
[snip]
Rafters doing calculus that would be something. He also said that
1 squared is sometimes equal to 2. I'm sure you'd like to see that
explained too.
I found https://www.math.toronto.edu/mathnet...first1eq2.html,
which MAY be of some help.
--
Mark Lloyd
http://notstupid.us/
"The truth cannot be asserted without denouncing the falsehood." [Leslie
Stephen]
It's right up Rafter's ally. This is a legitimate case where dividing
by zero is done and it produces an error. Unfortunately it doesn't prove
that 1 squared can be 2. Or that V =IR is invalid when I=0.