• moriquende@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Here you go:

    Please post a source that gives a different answer to this expression, I’ll wait.

    There’s of course programmers that implement their own projects, but for big monetized products that’s no longer the case. I’m in the software industry myself and have worked extensively in product development.

    Sure bro you have multiple downvotes in many posts, I’m sure it’s the person you’re arguing with logging in with multiple accounts lol.

    • Here you go

      Yep, that’s an old Casio model, Mr. “All modern calculators”, proving yet again that you can’t back up your own statements 😂

      Please post a source that gives a different answer to this expression, I’ll wait.

      No need to wait - just scroll back through this thread and look at all the sources I already posted 🙄

      for big monetized products that’s no longer the case

      You know none of the calculators you’re referring to are commercial right? They’re all free to use, and that tells you how much effort was put into them. The only e-calc I’ve ever seen give a correct answer is MathGPT, which is indeed commercial now (I tried it before it went commercial), so we have a commercial e-calc giving the correct answer, and all the free ones giving the wrong answer 😂

      I’m in the software industry myself

      So am I in case you didn’t notice 😂

      you have multiple downvotes in many posts

      I’ve never seen more than 2 on any, Mr. Needs To Exaggerate Because Has No Actual Evidence Of Being Right 😂

      • moriquende@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        You realize a calculator doesn’t need to be a dedicated hardware, right? Windows calculator, MacOS calculator, Android calculator, and all web-based calculators count as well.

        You have no clue what you’re talking about. Wolfram Alpha is a commercial product (with a free-tier as is usual nowadays) and uses the same engine as Mathematica, which is used extensively in industry, academic institutions, and government agencies.

        None of your sources has exponents in them, and that’s very convenient for your mistake of mixing up juxtaposition and your invented rule.

        Btw, ask yourself this as well: why would your invented interpretation of distributive law be necessary at all? It brings no benefit to the table at all. Juxtaposition arguably does, because it allows shorter notation, but your invention doesn’t.

        Please find a calculator that gives a result different to 128 for the expression 2(3+5. You won’t be able to, because it’s the only correct answer. If you don’t post a reproducible example of a solver anywhere coming to a different solution, I’ll consider your argument defeated and ignore further engagement from your part. Have a nice day!

        • You realize a calculator doesn’t need to be a dedicated hardware, right?

          You realise the calculator manufacturers have much more riding on their calculators being correct, right? 😂

          Windows calculator, MacOS calculator, Android calculator, and all web-based calculators count as well.

          Nope. Programmed by… programmers, who aren’t earning any money from the calculator, and put the corresponding amount of effort into it.

          You have no clue what you’re talking about.

          says someone who just claimed that e-calcs count as much as actual, buy from a store, calculators 🤣

          Alpha is a commercial product (with a free-tier as is usual nowadays)

          Also well known to give wrong answers

          uses the same engine as Mathematica, which is used extensively in industry, academic institutions

          Nope! Academia warns against using it

          None of your sources has exponents in them

          In other words, you’re admitting to trying to deflect from what’s in Maths textbooks! 😂

          that’s very convenient for your mistake of mixing up juxtaposition and your invented rule

          It’s the same rule, duh! Here it is in a textbook from more than 100 years ago when everything was still in brackets

          We’ve since then dropped the brackets from Factors which are a single Term. i.e. (a)(b+c) is now a(b+c), and (a)(b) is now ab. BTW would you like to explain how “my invented rule” appears in a textbook from more than 100 years ago? 🤣

          Btw, ask yourself this as well: why would your invented interpretation of distributive law be necessary at all?

          It’s not invented, it’s required as the reverse rule to Factorising, duh 😂 And I don’t need to ask myself - as usual, all you have to do is look in Maths textbooks for the reason 😂

          It brings no benefit to the table at all.

          Being able to reverse the process of Factorising brings no benefit to the table?? 🤣

          Juxtaposition arguably does

          It’s the same thing duh 🤣 ab=(a)(b), a(b+c)=(a)(b+c) notice how they are the same thing, expanding BRACKETS?? 🤣

          Maybe you’ve forgotten about FOIL…

          Now, think carefully about this, what happens when b=0, and what happens when d=0, you got it yet?? 🤣

          because it allows shorter notation

          AKA Factorised Terms and Products 😂

          your invention doesn’t.

          Again, explain how “my invention” appears in textbooks that are more than 100 years old. I’ll wait 🤣

          because it’s the only correct answer

          Have you noticed yet that everything you think is correct is actually wrong as per Maths textbooks?? 🤣

          I’ll consider your argument defeated

          says person who has been comprehensively defeated by Maths textbooks and is now trying to deflect away from that 🤣

          ignore further engagement from your part

          I’ll take that as an admission that you’re wrong then, having been unable to debunk any Maths textbooks. See ya

          • moriquende@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            Please find a calculator that gives a result different to 128 for the expression 2(3+5. Should be easy, no?

              • moriquende@lemmy.world
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                12 hours ago

                Nobody has argued exponents should go before brackets.

                I’m saying distribution being mandatory is an invented rule from your part.

                No wonder you can’t produce such a simple request. I thought you had calculators that work “correctly”?

                • Nobody has argued exponents should go before brackets

                  You did! 😂 You said 2(3+5)²=2(8)²=2(64), which is doing the Exponent when there are still unsolved Brackets 😂

                  I’m saying distribution being mandatory is an invented rule from your part

                  You still haven’t explained how it’s in 19th Century textbooks if I “made it up”! 😂

                  If you don’t remember Roman Numerals either, that’s 1898

                  No wonder you can’t produce such a simple request.

                  says person who still hasn’t produced a single textbook that supports anything that they say, and it’s such a simple request 😂

                  • moriquende@lemmy.world
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                    9 hours ago

                    Unsolved brackets

                    Solving brackets does not include forced distribution. Juxtaposition means multiplication, and as such, 2(3+5 is the same as 2*(3+5, so once the brackets result in 8, they’re solved.

                    Distribution needs to happen if you want to remove the brackets while there are still multiple terms inside, but it’s still a part of the multiplication. You can’t do it if there is an exponent, which has higher priority.

                    Your whole argument hangs on the misinterpretation of textbooks. This is what it feels like to argue against Bible fanatics lmao.

                    Tell you what, provide me a solver that says 2(3+5 is 256 and you’ve won, it’s so easy no?