Pool party!
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Pool party!
in the armsssss offfff an angleeee
this was funnier in my head
Super real math trick!
A lot of people mistake the phrase |2x| as meaning what is the absolute value of 2x. Those two lines actually mean that the number or phase inside of them is in jail. You don't need to know why, 2x knows what it did.
Piecewise Function with Two Absolute Values [Ex. 1]
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First post!! I wanted to show you how deep a rabbit hole you can dig with a very simple concept like, "What does 'four' mean?"
I have a number line.
So, I'd like you to imagine that you've sat down across from me on your first day in class, and I put some kind of math worksheet with this number line on it that gives you a very simple-sounding task: "Circle four."
If you are like nearly every one of the older students I've had, you'll circle the number 4 on the line. And I'd say something like, "That is a perfectly reasonable response to this request. There is nothing wrong with what you've done. But aren't you suspicious about how simple this question sounds? Did you see that there was a twist coming?"
On a number line, the place where we've written 4 is not actually the value 4. It is more like the position 4; we would call this the ordinal number (a number used to track the positional order of things; another example of an ordinal number is the word "fourth," which tells you that there are three other things before that one).
So, if you just circled the number 4, you definitely circled the position, but the thing you circled isn't worth 4. If you were going to circle the thing that has the value (or cardinality, since we're counting individual objects) of 4, it would look something more like this:
This is because in order to have the value of 4, you need everything that came before it! Imagine counting out candy while your kid sister steals and eats the candies you counted already. When you get to your final number, that number is not how many candies you have, but rather how many you counted cuz your sister's got 'em all! For the value of your candies to stay the same, you need all of them to be there!
"Four" could also look, less straightforwardly, like this:
The distance from the start of the circle to the end is four; and since we're circling the line, the length of the line that is circled is four. If we imagine the circle starts (from the left) at the position of 2.3, it would have to end at the position (from the right) 6.3. If we find the difference of the numbers at these positions, we would be doing the equation 6.3 - 2.3 = 4.
A quick summary:
The position of a number is shown with an ordinal number.
The actual physical quantity of the individual items is shown with a cardinal number, which we more typically call the value.
We can find a value inside the ordinals by finding the distance between any two ordinals, via subtraction.
Okay... But notice we've used two words here that seem to imply the same thing: difference and distance. Let's clear this up real quick:
Difference is the result of subtraction. Generally, if we want to find the difference between two things, we subtract the first thing from the second thing:
second - first = difference
But that's not a rule, so much as a norm. In reality, if you wanted to find the difference of two numbers, the person asking had best be very clear which way they want you to do it, because if you reverse this you will get the negative of the result above!
For example, if you were asked to find the difference between 6 and 15, you would do 15 - 6 = 9. But if it's not clear and you instead did 6 - 15, you get -9.
If, however, someone wanted to know how far apart these two numbers are, they would not be asking the difference but rather the distance between these numbers. The result would therefore be the absolute value of either one of these subtractions:
|15 - 6| = |9| = 9, |6 - 15| = |-9| = 9 Same result!
This is in actuality the real use of absolute values. Absolute value is typically shown as "the distance from zero," which is kind of true? But it's really for finding distances of any kind -- in fact, it's later used to mean exactly that when you get into complex algebra (that is, algebra with imaginary numbers) and linear algebra (matrices and vectors).
But that's for later.
Teljenarian
A gender that feels as though it is the absolute value of another gender. It is both the gender and the photo-negative or inverse of that gender.
The first flag is an umbrella flag for all teljenarian genders as well as representing neutral aligned teljenarian genders.
The flag on the bottom left represents teljenarian-feminine genders, and the flag on the bottom right represents teljenarian-masculine genders.
Jedi: y = x
Sith: y = |x|
Been spending the day studying Value schemes. If anyone has any tips on how to add in color after this step I’d greatly appreciate it 🥺
P.S. I think I messed up with the shading under Todoroki’s neck and originally I was just going to leave it because it would be a lot to fix, but now it’s kinda bothering me... might fix it later...