This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Tarquin (talk | contribs) at 09:53, 24 January 2002. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 09:53, 24 January 2002 by Tarquin (talk | contribs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Comments at the bottom, please. Eventually, we will have to refactor (probably just delete a lot of stuff from) this page. Some old talk has been moved to /Old_Talk.
On the question of capitalization in titles, I find a contradiction between the FAQ and somewhere else I can't remember. Should titles of articles be capitalized throughout, or only at the first word? rchase
- Contradiction? What contradiction? How could that possibly be, in a collaborative website? :-)
Can I encourage you, mathematicians, to please use lowercase titles? When you use uppercase titles, that forces people to Capitalize Words that Wouldn't Usually be Capitalized in Ordinary Standard English. See naming conventions.
Why isn't there any coverage of K-12 Mathematics? The focus so far is on advanced undergraduate topics.
I have a suggestion for a slight reorganization of the main page:
- "Methods" becomes "Foundations"
- "Miscellanea" becomes "History and Miscellanea"
- "History of Mathematics" (to be created) goes into "History and Miscellanea"
- "Special Functions" moves to "Change"
- "Fermat's little theorem" goes on a "Number theory" page (to be created under "Structure")
- Links to "Symbolic Logic" and "Set Theory" are placed under "Foundations and History" (Set Theory also remains under Finite Math)
- "Finite Math" moves down the list, after "Space"
- "Discrete Math" moves under "Finite Math"
What do you guys and gals think? --AxelBoldt
An alternative well thought out classification scheme for math is at http://www.math-atlas.org/index/beginners.html----
As one of the original autors of Math entries here, like Group, Field, Linear algebra, Trigonometric Functions, I think that the new group of articles, are too high level for the average reader, particularly without examples. Many college grads get out of college with
a general math course. I think we have to begin to fill in the lower levels.
In regard to your placement of Finite Mathematics under Space, I do not agree. We also need people to draw graphics for some of these entries, not to mention a way to do matrices. RoseParks
What should the policy on Greek letters be?
I notice that the symbols on the Mathematical constants page appear as
blocks in Opera 5.11.
Perhaps it would be better just to write them out as pi, gamma, etc.,
so that they are at least readable.
Zundark, 2001-08-08
I think for now we shouldn't formulate a policy: it should be up to the individual author. If you are interested in
widest readability, then spelling out the symbols is best. However, all entities we use (α, ∫, etc., see Howdoesoneeditapage/Quickreference)
are valid HTML 4.0 entities and browsers will sooner or later come around to supporting them. I believe the
newest versions of Internet Explorer and Mozilla support almost all of them already; I'm not sure about Konqueror.
--AxelBoldt
Yes, you're right. I didn't realise it was valid HTML 4.0. So it's Opera's fault for not understanding it. It works in IE4 anyway, and is at least comprehensible in Netscape 4, so I'll carry on doing it.
Zundark
- ----
- Hadn't noticed it, but all the nice math symbols (including Σ, ∫, etc) that work fine w/ NS6.0 on Linux fail utterly w/ Opera 4. Latin-1 works fine with both (of course, latin-1 is the native char set).
- So how about things like the inverted Δ (Del), inverted A, reversed E? Being an engineer, not a mathematician, these would provide all the symbols I am likely to need.
- --Buz Cory
- Found a pretty complete set of math symbols on how does one edit a page/Quick reference. For instance ∇, ∀, ∃.
- Also did some more browser checking. StarOffice 5.0 fails utterly on the Greek and Math entities, also. --Buz Cory
Um has any one thought of putting a chaos page on any where?
Like the mandelbrot and the like.
I don't know much about it but I would love to learn.
Michael (Tas)
- Apparently nobody has. There's a bit about the Mandelbrot set though, and a stub about fractals. I'll put a\
link to "Dynamical systems and chaos theory" on the main mathematics home page under "Change", and hopefully\
someone will bite. --AxelBoldt
It's a shame the mathematics page still lacks a good general article about mathematics. With so many mathematicians about, you'd think a general discussion and characterization of mathematics would be forthcoming. --LMS
Shouldn't there be an article for Trigonometry? I know that we have the Trig Functions article, but general trig is more broad than that.
Also, shouldn't the number sets be combined under the auspices of one article so that they can have a logical overview and venn diagram to describe their structure?
- A page like Numbers could certainly be put under "Quantity" and then it could have an overview and links to all the various number sets and explain their relationships. I would still want to keep links to the reals, complexes etc. right on the main page, so that they are easily accessible. --AxelBoldt
Shouldn't there be a page on transforms? I'm not a mathematician,
and can't write it myself. Some transforms I would like to see
described are: fourier, cosine, z (used in digital signal processing),
laplace, chirp, hilbert, etc. The transforms should be compared
regarding their use. --HelgeStenstrom--
I don't think I have ever seen an encyclopedia of mathematics, so I have a question about encyclopedias of mathematics. Would the entry about elementary group theory in such an encyclopedia consist, as it does here, of a system of group theory? Or would it just discuss such a system? Don't get me wrong--I think we should have mathematical systems in Misplaced Pages. I am asking whether there might be some other information that mathematicians might expect out of an encyclopedia, that we aren't supplying, in most cases, yet. --LMS
I'm only familiar with one Encyclopedia of Mathematics, which is a very large one translated from Russian. The entries usually contain definitions, discuss important results, and give a list of references to the literature. They certainly wouldn't have a article like elementary group theory, since any mathematician should know that anyway. (The article is probably misnamed; proofs of the most basic results in group theory would be more accurate.) Note that we have another article, mathematical group, which discusses group theory. --Zundark
I took the section about Mathematical Books out of the main page. While it would be nice to have a bibliographical listing, right now we don't and it's premature to put it on the main page. --AxelBoldt
Somebody added that topology focuses on the concepts of continuity and direction. I don't see what topology has to do with direction, but I could be convinced. Generally, when I think "direction", I think "tangent space" and hence "differential geometry". How can you talk about direction in topology? --AxelBoldt
- perhaps they meant orientable surfaces in algebraic topology. -- Tarquin
"Arithmetic does not count as a "foundation for mathematics"; it is part of elementary algebra"--AxelBoldt
Then why does the elementary algebra article begin: "For this introduction, knowledge of arithmetic (including the use of parentheses) is assumed." --BlackGriffen
No substantive knowledge, except of the English language common to an intelligent high school graduate, should be assumed--unless an exposition of the subject really does require such assumptions. In this case, since we introduce school children to arithmetic all the time, I should think we need a simpler article about arithmetic... In other words, Misplaced Pages's math articles should, while being maximally useful for mathematicians, also be very useful for non-mathematicians. --LMS
Yes, the elementary algebra article is incomplete and should start out very gently with introducing the order of operations, parentheses, commutativity and associativity etc. (or factor out to an arithmetic article and add a link to elementary algebra if that seems preferable). --AxelBoldt
Should there be a page for arithmetic? There's a page for modular arithmetic, defining it as "a modified system of arithmetic", without any definition of that term. Is it considered to be such a simple concept as to require only a dictionary definition? - Stuart Presnell
- See the above discussion. I think we should have a separate article on arithmetic, but I'm not really sure how to write elementary stuff like this, so I haven't attempted it. --Zundark, 2002 Jan 5
What do you think about removing the link to trigonometric functions from the main math page. There's already a link to it under special functions. --Georg Muntingh
Yup, that makes sense. What we really need is a Trigonometry article though. --AxelBoldt
Okay. How can I be sure most people agree? Shall I remove it? (It looks very logical to me.) --Georg Muntingh
- Just do it - you'll soon find out if someone doesn't agree. :-) --Zundark, 2002 Jan 12
A question for you all: is is the inequality
- ||u ± v|| ≥ | ||u|| - ||v|| |
(quoted from Normed vector space) known as the Cauchy-Schwartz Inequality, or am I thinking of something else?