vv

13922 Reputation

20 Badges

10 years, 10 days

MaplePrimes Activity


These are replies submitted by vv

Nice example, vote up!
NextZero has the parameters guardDigits, maxdistance, initialDigits
but is is very hard to guess a successfull combination. In other cases it works.
It is sad that such simple examples exist!
 

So, for the first F, you have the equations

F(a, b) + a = F(a, b + 1),  F(a, b) = F(a*(a + 1)/2, 2),  a,b in N.

The general solution for the first equation is:

F (a, b)  =  f(a) + a*b

where f is a function of a single variable. Plugging in the second one ==>

f(a*(a + 1)/2) + a*(a + 1) - f(a) - a*b = 0

But this is obviously impossible for arbitrary a,b in N, so, F does not exist.

The same for the second F.

@Mikhail Drugov The package is not bad. This function seems to be not very often used with custom RVs.

To report a bug, check the menu  More ... > Submit Software Change Request

@AmirHosein Sadeghimanesh  All errors obtained during the type checking are not very informative; they simply say that the type is not expected.
solve( [x-[2*y]=3] );
Error, (in unknown) invalid input: Utilities:-SetEquations expects its 2nd argument, equations, to be of type set({boolean, algebraic, relation}), but received {[0]}
 

@ComputerUser  Try to formulate the problem in math terms. Don't use Maple or Excel in this formulation.

@ik74 Impossible, unless you change A itself.

@ComputerUser  F^(-1) is probably the inverse (if it exists) of F : N^2 --> N,
but then  F^(-1) ( F(n,n+1), 2 )  is nonsense.

I'd suggest a more difficult conjecture for the next project: any odd number can be written as the difference of a prime number and twice a perfect square.

@Carl Love I think that OP would prefer

eq_arrangement:= (k::posint) -> [k, seq('k+i,k-i', i=1..k-1)];

(maybe also  a local i).

@Hullzie16 The command discont gives the set of discontinuity points. I took the three points (say a,b,c) in the interval 0..5.
The functions were plotted in the intervals  e .. a-e,  a+e .. b-e,  b+e .. c-e,  c+e .. 5-e  (e=0.001) and then displayed together.

@Hullzie16 I took the real parts of the functions. If you want the gaps (to see where the functions have complex values), just remove Re.

@oggsait The equality you want is true only for alpha=1.

@oggsait After expand(simplify(%));  ==>

 

 

restart

assume(0 < alpha, alpha < 1)

fracdiff(t^(3*alpha)/GAMMA(1+3*alpha), t, alpha)

t^(2*alpha)/GAMMA(2*alpha+1)

(1)

simplify(fracdiff(%, t, alpha))

t^alpha/GAMMA(alpha+1)

(2)

 

 

Download fdiff.mw

@dharr It depends on conventions. E,g. in complex analysis, z > 7 means: Im(z) = 0 and Re(z)>7,  but z > 2+3i is not accepted (nonsense).

First 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 Last Page 33 of 176