Re: Does the number of nines increase?

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Sujet : Re: Does the number of nines increase?
De : wolfgang.mueckenheim (at) *nospam* tha.de (WM)
Groupes : sci.math
Date : 08. Jul 2024, 20:57:33
Autres entêtes
Organisation : Nemoweb
Message-ID : <AorII1f7PWb6eMa2Lfl7MFs-xLU@jntp>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
User-Agent : Nemo/0.999a
Le 08/07/2024 à 19:33, Jim Burns a écrit :
On 7/8/2024 9:49 AM, WM wrote:

the answer to your question is the third option: none.
That is ridiculous.

There is no point x > 0: NUF(x) < ℵ₀
That is wrong because 10 unit fractions and their finite distances occupy a part of the positive axis which has a finite positive measure. Therefore there exist x > 0: NUF(x) < 11. in order to accumulate ℵ₀ unit fractions, at least 10 must exist at the beginning. Are you unable to understand that?
There is no point x < 0: NUF(x) > 0
NUF(x) changes "at" 0.
The function f(x) = [x] changes at 1 from 0 to 1, at 2 from 1 to 2, and so on.
The function NUF(x) changes at unit fractions by 1, but not before, not at 0.
 
>
Therefore it does not change at 0.
 Functions do not change at single points.
You are wrong. The function f(x) = [x] changes at the points 1, 2, 3, ...

A change needs be _with respect to_ something,
yes, to the value befor that point.
 Consider
No. A person who believes in loss by exchange and NUF changing at 0 is not of interest to me.
Regards, WM

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