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Le 18/07/2024 à 04:15, Richard Damon a écrit :Sigh. 0/1, or zero, is not a unit fraction.On 7/17/24 10:43 AM, WM wrote:What do you miss in its definition?Can you explain how NUF(x) can increase from 0 to many more in one point x although all unit fractions are separated by finite distances of uncountably many x each?Because is isn't a properly defined function.
>>Then basic mathematics is false. ∀n ∈ ℕ: 1/n - 1/(n+1) > 0 shows that every unit fraction occupies its own point.
It has no finite value for any finite value of x > 0.>Does it go from 0 to ℵo? How can that happen?
Thus, one need no figure how it gets from 0 to any other number, since it doesn't.
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