IT'S NOT EVEN AN EQUATION??? IT'S AN EXPRESSIONpic.twitter.com/nLGdUflrSk
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IT'S NOT EVEN AN EQUATION??? IT'S AN EXPRESSIONpic.twitter.com/nLGdUflrSk
love when we make math look even more like it's been deliberately designed to trick you, i'm sure that'll help anything
watch me blow your mind: once you get past basic algebra, the order of operations is almost entirely irrelevant, because the notation enforces which things happen first
now if you really want to make mathematicians squabble, write down ln² x ln⁻¹ x and just walk away
"ln² x" could mean either "(ln x)²" or "ln (ln x)" depending on which convention you adopt. It almost always means the former, but this is notationally inconsistent with "ln⁻¹ x" which means "exp x"
thank you. I've taken advanced calculus, I've never seen ln(ln(x)) written out as ln² And my first instinct for ln⁻¹x would be (ln(x))⁻¹, but you're saying it would be e^x?
Yes. For general functions, f, the convention is that f^0(x) = x, f^{n+1}(x) = f^n( f(x) ), and then f^{-1}(x) is inverse of x to keep this rule going (so f^0(x) = f^{-1}(f(x)). However for specific functions like ln, sin, etc. this is abandoned. See e.g. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Function_composition#Functional_powers …
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