i should really flatten down the css in my website because embedded css rules is only really supported recently. i tried to view it with an ipad from 2012 and threw up, but that's the hardware WORTH designing for
seen from Spain

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from Philippines

seen from Italy

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Russia

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Japan
seen from Finland

seen from Maldives
seen from Japan
seen from United States

seen from Finland
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from China
i should really flatten down the css in my website because embedded css rules is only really supported recently. i tried to view it with an ipad from 2012 and threw up, but that's the hardware WORTH designing for
..it is TOUGH to write about group theory
explained by a sixth form student
i've given it a shot. this is draft, it's nowhere near complete, but i can't shake the feeling that the tangibility of the post goes downhill as soon as i try to explain the group of automorphisms.
i don't know how else to present it, i'm thinking of making some low quality 2swapstyle gifs, but i'm ever conscious of spoon feeding "realisations" to the reader. also, the way i tried to fit in the toddler joke is clunky at best
giving up on finding Q-automorphisms of the splitting field of a higher degree polynomial as an example for my post 😭 i thought a couple more automorphisms would help demonstrate the Galois group better but i just ended up confusing myself more
gem from my next post
made the blog generator public, not that it does anything special, although it is a very neat static site generator in and of itself
the main benefit is that the way i have it set up now doesn't require github pro to keep it published on gh pages (since it clones from a separate private repo with all the posts when deploying), so it's no biggie if i lose my gh pro. my uni better still have it tho..
also, quick apologetic upd8 post is up! + some additions to group theory 101
i've seriously been neglecting the shrublog i don't even know if i can call it a blog anymore, it's been a couple months since i last posted
a maths problem i liked - shrublog
first (?) shrublog is live!!
i really liked this question we got in class, a pretty straightforward application of Leibniz's product rule with a nice twist, so i decided to write it up as practice!!
i'd really appreciate any feedback on the style and clarity of my write up <3