Message from @Exilarch
Discord ID: 384099153854201858
I didn't have to do shit
WHITE PRIDE WORLD WIDE - Today at 10:44 PM
Lol in high school I had a natural science teacher who tried to convince me and my class that ghosts exists.
what
I had a bio teacher spend like a whole lecture on trying to disprove the bible
Found this at the public library among current magazines.
"young and trans"
"Antonia and Viktoria, two role models for young trans persons".
#triggered
Looks to me to be aimed at kids who has recently entered puberty.
What the shirt says also reveals a lot 馃檮
are you aafraid to se the word faggot?
uuuse
Are they trans trenders? They don't really look trans
@Hagel yeah actually had a teacher who seriously tried to convince us that ghosts lived in her home and she was our presumably uneducated but still employed to be our natural science teacher.
`So now I can calculate the geometric distance between any number of abstract concepts that might have 48 dimensions, and still you can compute the distance with more dimensions than exists in the 3d space we can percieve. Things I was told I could never do smile`
That's pretty cool dude. I can last like 50 minutes right now. Usually I can put it back in for another round right after.
lol
You use the pythagorean theorem to compute the distance, assuming it's 2d you can represent a point as a 2d-vector in the cartesian plane then it will have an x and a y coordinate.
Those are the dimensions of the vector.
like in real life what is it you're trying to do
Showing how the pythagorean theorem works in an infinite number of dimensions not just with two dimensions like you learn in shool it has broad applications in computational geometry, 3d computer graphics, measurements of the earth, space navigation, physics it's endless.
馃槃
so 2d pyfagorean theorem gives you the hypotenuse length, if you add a dimension does it give you the triangle's area?
like if you take 3 line segments, does it give you the area of the triangle between the points?
just trying to understand the application concept
you can extend the theorem to 3 dimensions for example all you have to do is add it as well like sqrt(a^2 + b^2 + c^2)
that's it, it applies to any number of dimensions
that's it? square root of variables squared?
to find a length between 2 points ye
I see
length between 2 points
so in the 3d version, where you had 3 vectors at right angle, what would the result of that tell you
And if you modify the pythagorean theorem or just subtract two vectors/points with eachother and then compute the pythagorean theorem on the resulting vector from the subtraction you get the distance between the two points in space.
nigger turn down your autism, just answer my questions straight so I can understand
if you had 3 vectors that were all perpendicular to each other it would tell you the total length of all 3
only when all are perpendicular
okay
wait... so if you had 3 vectors perpendicular, all with magnitude 1, that theorem would give you sqrt3, like 1.7
yeah