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https://proofwiki.org/wiki/Number_of_Permutations/Examples | # Number of Permutations/Examples
### $4$ from $52$
The number of ways of choosing $4$ objects in order from a set of $52$ (for example, cards from a deck) is:
${}^4 P_{52} = 52 \times 51 \times 50 \times 49 = \dfrac {52!} {48!} = 6 \, 497 \, 400$ | 2020-07-07 15:18:28 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9652811884880066, "perplexity": 215.54816124950665}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 20, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-29/segments/1593655893487.8/warc/CC-MAIN-20200707142557-20200707172557-00063.warc.gz"} | 93 |
http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/161280/how-to-make-plot-of-non-linear-equation-with-maple?answertab=active | How to make plot of non linear equation with Maple?
I have differential equation : $x"=r*(y')^2-g/r^2$, and $y"=-2*y'*x'/r$, by $r$ and $g$ are constant. How to make plot of this non linear equation with Maple?
-
What are $x"$ and $y"$? Did you mean $x''(t)$ and $y''(t)$? Do you want the plot of possible solution? If so, you should consider initial conditions here and more importantly the values of constants should be given. :-) – Babak S. Jun 21 '12 at 17:58 | 2013-05-21 06:18:21 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8211672902107239, "perplexity": 189.28466917675786}, "config": {"markdown_headings": false, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2013-20/segments/1368699730479/warc/CC-MAIN-20130516102210-00031-ip-10-60-113-184.ec2.internal.warc.gz"} | 141 |
https://proofwiki.org/wiki/Category:Derivative_of_Sine_Function | # Category:Derivative of Sine Function
Jump to navigation Jump to search
## Pages in category "Derivative of Sine Function"
The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total. | 2023-03-25 03:56:39 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8832795023918152, "perplexity": 10385.624729687826}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": false}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2023-14/segments/1679296945315.31/warc/CC-MAIN-20230325033306-20230325063306-00168.warc.gz"} | 45 |
http://archive.numdam.org/articles/AIF_2006__56_2_459_0/citations/ | List of citations in Numdam for : A spectral Paley-Wiener theorem for the Heisenberg group and a support theorem for the twisted spherical means on ${ℂ}^{n}$
Annales de l'Institut Fourier, Volume 56 (2006) no. 2, p. 459-473
Annales de l'Institut Fourier, Volume 59 (2009) no. 6, p. 2509-2523 | 2020-07-03 13:32:23 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 2, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.6277914643287659, "perplexity": 296.9237738779307}, "config": {"markdown_headings": false, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-29/segments/1593655882051.19/warc/CC-MAIN-20200703122347-20200703152347-00263.warc.gz"} | 99 |
https://web2.0calc.com/questions/given-that-f-x-x-k-where-k-lt-0-what-is-the-range | +0
# Given that $f(x) = x^k$ where $k < 0$, what is the range of $f(x)$ on the interval $[1, \infty)$?
0
32
0
Given that $f(x) = x^k$ where $k < 0$, what is the range of $f(x)$ on the interval $[1, \infty)$?
Guest Apr 16, 2018
Sort: | 2018-04-25 06:54:27 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.997527003288269, "perplexity": 215.18305107872072}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-17/segments/1524125947705.94/warc/CC-MAIN-20180425061347-20180425081347-00381.warc.gz"} | 100 |
https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/integrate-e.463067/ | # Integrate e
at= 0.5etm/s2
at = dv/dt
## The Attempt at a Solution
v = integration of 0.5et
Char. Limit
Gold Member
So what is the integral of e^(t) dt?
HallsofIvy
If you know that the derivative of $e^t$ is just $e^t$ itself, then its integral is easy. | 2021-05-09 21:02:16 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9800616502761841, "perplexity": 1801.732796240336}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-21/segments/1620243989012.26/warc/CC-MAIN-20210509183309-20210509213309-00474.warc.gz"} | 91 |
https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/finding-bounds-of-triple-integral.442636/ | # Finding bounds of triple integral
## Homework Statement
Evaluate the triple integral of the function (x+5y)dV Where E is bounded by a parabolic cylinder and the planes z=9x z=0 y=18x and y=3x^2
I just wanted to knw if my bounds are correct.
Here they are
for dz:
0 to 9x
dy:
18x to 3x^2
dx:
0 to 6
## Answers and Replies
vela
Staff Emeritus
Science Advisor
Homework Helper
Education Advisor
Your limits for y are backwards, but otherwise everything looks okay. | 2021-10-21 20:04:55 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8275517821311951, "perplexity": 9197.332502943289}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": false}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-43/segments/1634323585441.99/warc/CC-MAIN-20211021195527-20211021225527-00051.warc.gz"} | 134 |
https://scholars.ttu.edu/en/publications/study-of-jpsi-meson-production-inside-jets-in-pp-collisions-at-sq | # Study of J/$\psi$ meson production inside jets in pp collisions at $\sqrt{s} =$ 8 TeV
Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review
Original language English 135409 Default journal Published - 2020
## Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Study of J/$\psi$ meson production inside jets in pp collisions at $\sqrt{s} =$ 8 TeV'. Together they form a unique fingerprint. | 2022-05-18 12:36:30 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.24283011257648468, "perplexity": 10431.459952080748}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-21/segments/1652662522270.37/warc/CC-MAIN-20220518115411-20220518145411-00144.warc.gz"} | 96 |
http://blog.bigsmoke.us/2010/11/05/configuring-a-samba-share-with-unix-extensions-which-all-users-can-write-to | # Configuring a Samba share with unix extensions which all users can write to
Because the unix permission model sucks, it is very hard to have a shared directory where everybody has full access to each others files. The same is true when making a shared samba archive. Luckily, samba has forcing options.
[archief]
comment = save stuff here
path = /path
guest ok = yes
writeable = yes
browseable = yes
force user = samba
force group = samba
force directory mode = 0770 | 2018-05-25 01:10:13 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.6047068238258362, "perplexity": 11344.409660888952}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-22/segments/1526794866917.70/warc/CC-MAIN-20180525004413-20180525024413-00559.warc.gz"} | 112 |
https://socratic.org/questions/how-do-you-find-the-roots-real-and-imaginary-of-y-x-2-8x-x-4-2-using-the-quadrat | # How do you find the roots, real and imaginary, of y= x^2 - 8x + (x+4)^2 using the quadratic formula?
May 12, 2018
color(maroon)("two roots are " +2sqrt2 i, -2sqrt2 i
#### Explanation:
$y = {x}^{2} - 8 x + {\left(x + 4\right)}^{2}$
$y = {x}^{2} - 8 x + {x}^{2} + 8 x + 16$
$y = 2 {x}^{2} + 16$
$x = \frac{- b \pm \sqrt{{b}^{2} - 4 a c}}{2 a}$
$a = 2 , b = 0 , c = 16$
$x = \frac{0 \pm \sqrt{0 - 128}}{4}$
$x = \pm 8 \frac{\sqrt{- 2}}{4} = \pm 2 \sqrt{- 2}$
color(maroon)(x = + 2sqrt2 i, -2sqrt2 i | 2019-06-24 21:37:30 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 9, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.30604466795921326, "perplexity": 8789.720952991016}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-26/segments/1560627999740.32/warc/CC-MAIN-20190624211359-20190624233359-00432.warc.gz"} | 247 |
http://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=MR2413864 | MathSciNet bibliographic data MR2413864 35Q53 Zhang, Jiao; Wei, Xiaoli; Lu, Yongjie A generalized $(\frac{G'}G)$$(\frac{G'}G)$-expansion method and its applications. Phys. Lett. A 372 (2008), no. 20, 3653–3658. Article
For users without a MathSciNet license , Relay Station allows linking from MR numbers in online mathematical literature directly to electronic journals and original articles. Subscribers receive the added value of full MathSciNet reviews. | 2017-08-23 04:48:39 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 1, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9974055290222168, "perplexity": 9315.337803377863}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2017-34/segments/1502886117519.92/warc/CC-MAIN-20170823035753-20170823055753-00322.warc.gz"} | 121 |
https://kunguz.github.io/odak/odak/learn/wave/calculate_phase/ | odak.learn.wave.calculate_phase¶
i::: odak.learn.wave.calculate_phase selection: docstring_style: numpy
Notes¶
Regarding usage of this definition, you can find use cases in the engineering notes, specifically at Optimizing holograms using Odak. | 2022-07-06 04:22:49 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.6661363840103149, "perplexity": 13441.779022828341}, "config": {"markdown_headings": false, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-27/segments/1656104660626.98/warc/CC-MAIN-20220706030209-20220706060209-00644.warc.gz"} | 56 |
https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/1079632/visualizing-riemannian-surface | Visualizing Riemannian surface
Given a multi-valued complex function $f: z = x+\mathrm{i}\,y\rightarrow w=u+\mathrm{i}\,v$ with $x,y,u,v\in\mathbb{R}$, we know the image $\{f(z)\,|\,z\in\mathbb{C}\}$ is a Riemannian surface. How to visualise this surface?
What I saw on the web is usually a surface corresponding to the graph of the map i.e. $\{(x,y,u)\,|\,x,y\in\mathbb{R},u=\mathrm{Re}\,f(x+\mathrm{i}y)\}$, which is not the Riemanninan surface. | 2019-05-23 09:15:35 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8883066773414612, "perplexity": 354.36037473883306}, "config": {"markdown_headings": false, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-22/segments/1558232257197.14/warc/CC-MAIN-20190523083722-20190523105722-00324.warc.gz"} | 156 |
https://space.stackexchange.com/revisions/29478/5 | I'm trying to take into account the Earth geopotential effect on the orbit. The only term I could consider, is J2.
3.Why does the shown equation give 1 km error in 1 day in comparison with GMAT (configuration is below)? The coefficients for Eq radius and J2 are the same. The integrator is 9th order Runge-Kutta with tol=10e-13. | 2020-05-29 04:15:53 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8788198232650757, "perplexity": 1180.9728839384447}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-24/segments/1590347401260.16/warc/CC-MAIN-20200529023731-20200529053731-00084.warc.gz"} | 86 |
https://socratic.org/questions/how-do-you-simplify-8-2-3-9-8-2-3 | # How do you simplify [8*2-(3+9)]+[8-2*3]?
Apr 1, 2018
$6$
#### Explanation:
Parentheses first!
$\left[8 \cdot 2 - 12\right] + \left[8 - 2 \cdot 3\right]$
Then multiplication/division!
$\left[16 - 12\right] + \left[8 - 6\right]$
$\left[4\right] + \left[2\right]$
Remove the brackets and Add 'em all up to get $4 + 2 = 6$
You should simplify and get $6$. | 2021-12-06 17:17:34 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 6, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9827013611793518, "perplexity": 2956.2867293905074}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-49/segments/1637964363309.86/warc/CC-MAIN-20211206163944-20211206193944-00609.warc.gz"} | 141 |
http://clay6.com/qa/27321/a-hyperbola-whose-asymptotes-includes-a-right-angle-is-said-to-be | Browse Questions
# A hyperbola whose asymptotes includes a right angle is said to be
$\begin{array}{1 1}(a)\;\text{Conjugate hyperbola}\\(b)\;\text{Rectangular hyperbola}\\(c)\;\text{Foci of hyperbola}\\(d)\;\text{None of these}\end{array}$
A hyperbola whose asymptotes includes a right angle is said to be rectangular hyperbola
Hence (b) is the correct answer. | 2017-01-21 19:46:11 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9196400046348572, "perplexity": 710.0408117734258}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 20, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2017-04/segments/1484560281202.94/warc/CC-MAIN-20170116095121-00446-ip-10-171-10-70.ec2.internal.warc.gz"} | 111 |
https://www.studyadda.com/question-bank/whole-numbers_q32/2341/208187 | • # question_answer Two whole numbers X and Y are such that X = 2Y. Which among the following statements is definitely false? A) X+Y=3Y B) X-Y=YC) X + 2Y = 4Y D) Y = 2X
$\text{X=2Y}\Rightarrow \text{Y=}\frac{\text{X}}{\text{2}}$ and not$\text{2X}$. | 2020-09-21 00:22:51 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.33838093280792236, "perplexity": 1479.6656991878156}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.3, "absolute_threshold": 20, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-40/segments/1600400198868.29/warc/CC-MAIN-20200920223634-20200921013634-00023.warc.gz"} | 102 |
https://www.gradesaver.com/textbooks/math/algebra/algebra-2-1st-edition/chapter-5-polynomials-and-polynomial-functions-5-2-evaluate-and-graph-polynomial-functions-5-2-exercises-mixed-review-page-344/66 | ## Algebra 2 (1st Edition)
$-9 \lt z \lt 4$
Given: $x^2+5x-36\lt0$ Let the equation equal 0: $x^2+5x-36=0$ $a=1, b=5, c=-36$ Find $x$ by using: $x=\frac{-b \pm \sqrt b^2-4ac}{2a}=\frac{-5\pm\sqrt 5^2-4.1.(-36)}{2.1}=\frac{-5\pm13}{2}$ $x=\frac{-5+13}{2}$ or $x=\frac{-5-13}{2}$ $x=4$ or $x=-9$ Since $a \gt 0$ and the inequality sign is $\lt$, the solution region is below and not including the dashed boundary line. Hence, the solution is $-9 \lt z \lt 4$. | 2021-05-17 22:57:47 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9065914750099182, "perplexity": 233.5195203141501}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-21/segments/1620243991870.70/warc/CC-MAIN-20210517211550-20210518001550-00239.warc.gz"} | 208 |
https://www.gradesaver.com/textbooks/math/algebra/algebra-2-1st-edition/chapter-2-linear-equations-and-functions-2-6-draw-scatter-plots-and-best-fitting-lines-2-6-exercises-mixed-review-page-120/37 | Algebra 2 (1st Edition)
$f(x)=9$
Given: $f(x)=-4x-11$ Plugging in $x=-5$ $f(-5)=-4(-5)-11$ $f(x)=9$ | 2022-12-06 02:58:46 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.3999720811843872, "perplexity": 1794.423474499627}, "config": {"markdown_headings": false, "markdown_code": false, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-49/segments/1669446711069.79/warc/CC-MAIN-20221206024911-20221206054911-00235.warc.gz"} | 52 |
https://socratic.org/questions/how-do-you-find-the-slope-of-the-tangent-line-of-f-x-3-2x-3-at-1-5 | # How do you find the slope of the tangent line of f(x) = 3-2x^3 at (-1, 5)?
Aug 5, 2015
I found: slope$= - 6$
#### Explanation:
The slope of the tangent will be the derivative of your function evaluated at $x = - 1$ (the $x$ coordinate of the tangence point).
So:
$f ' \left(x\right) = 0 - 6 {x}^{2} = - 6 {x}^{2}$
evaluated at $x = - 1$:
$f ' \left(- 1\right) = - 6$
So the slope of the tangent will be $- 6$. | 2021-10-23 02:06:27 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 7, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.688507616519928, "perplexity": 430.6819654172324}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-43/segments/1634323585537.28/warc/CC-MAIN-20211023002852-20211023032852-00693.warc.gz"} | 156 |
https://www.transtutors.com/questions/compute-the-value-of-encom-immediately-after-the-initial-investment-at-the-beginning-2813422.htm | Compute the value of EnCom immediately after the initial investment at the beginning of period on...
Compute the value of EnCom immediately after the initial investment at the beginning of period one using the discounted free cash flow method. | 2020-02-24 09:22:12 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8602902293205261, "perplexity": 719.4750037544835}, "config": {"markdown_headings": false, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-10/segments/1581875145910.53/warc/CC-MAIN-20200224071540-20200224101540-00257.warc.gz"} | 43 |
http://www.impan.pl/cgi-bin/dict?stress | ## stress
#### 1
[see also: emphasis]
In his lectures, he laid great stress on the use of ......
#### 2
[see also: emphasize, underline]
Let us stress that $c$ is a term and not a subset of $C$.
We should stress that this is only one of several versions of the `measurable selector theorem', due variously to von Neumann, Jankow, Lusin and others.
It should be stressed, however, that ......
Go to the list of words starting with: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w y z | 2015-08-28 09:28:43 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.5279470086097717, "perplexity": 651.351094122814}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": false}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2015-35/segments/1440644062760.2/warc/CC-MAIN-20150827025422-00332-ip-10-171-96-226.ec2.internal.warc.gz"} | 139 |
https://gauravtiwari.org/tag/column-vector/ | ## Just another way to Multiply
Multiplication is probably the most important elementary operation in mathematics; even more important than usual addition. Every math-guy has its own style of multiplying numbers. But have you ever tried multiplicating by this way? Exercise: $88 \times 45$ =? Ans: as usual :- 3960 but I got this using a particular way: 88 45 176 22 352 11 704 5 1408 2 2816 1 Sum… | 2018-02-24 13:54:29 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8630780577659607, "perplexity": 5658.715498640327}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 20, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-09/segments/1518891815812.83/warc/CC-MAIN-20180224132508-20180224152508-00433.warc.gz"} | 119 |
https://www.gradesaver.com/textbooks/math/other-math/CLONE-547b8018-14a8-4d02-afd6-6bc35a0864ed/chapter-9-basic-algebra-test-page-701/12 | ## Basic College Mathematics (10th Edition)
$(-16)(0)=-16\times0=0$ In general, the product of a number and 0 will be 0. | 2022-06-28 19:06:38 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9037104249000549, "perplexity": 771.4012854091046}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-27/segments/1656103573995.30/warc/CC-MAIN-20220628173131-20220628203131-00687.warc.gz"} | 39 |
https://www.neetprep.com/question/6176-following-compounds-lowest-boiling-pointaCHCHCHCHCHbCHCHCHCHCHcCHCHCHCHCHdCHCHCHCH | • Subject:
...
• Chapter:
...
Which of the following compounds has the lowest boiling point?
(a) ${\mathrm{CH}}_{3}{\mathrm{CH}}_{2}{\mathrm{CH}}_{2}{\mathrm{CH}}_{2}{\mathrm{CH}}_{3}$
(b) ${\mathrm{CH}}_{3}\mathrm{CH}=\mathrm{CH}-{\mathrm{CH}}_{2}{\mathrm{CH}}_{3}$
(c) ${\mathrm{CH}}_{3}\mathrm{CH}=\mathrm{CH}-\mathrm{CH}={\mathrm{CH}}_{2}$
(d) ${\mathrm{CH}}_{3}{\mathrm{CH}}_{2}{\mathrm{CH}}_{2}{\mathrm{CH}}_{3}$ | 2019-04-26 02:31:29 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 4, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.2095327228307724, "perplexity": 3344.9343470328295}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-18/segments/1555578747424.89/warc/CC-MAIN-20190426013652-20190426034817-00036.warc.gz"} | 174 |
https://www.gradesaver.com/textbooks/math/calculus/calculus-8th-edition/appendix-d-trigonometry-d-exercises-page-a33/63 | ## Calculus 8th Edition
$sin2y=\frac{24}{25}$
Evaluate the expression $sin2y$ Given: $sinx=\frac{1}{3}$ and $secy=\frac{5}{4}$ Since, $sin2y=2sinycosy$ ...(1) Thus, $sinx=\frac{1}{3}$ gives opp =1 , hyp = 3 and adj $=\sqrt {3^{2}-1^{2}}=2\sqrt 2$ Therefore, $cos x=\frac{2\sqrt 2}{3}$ Now, $secy=\frac{5}{4}$ gives hyp =5 , adj =4 and opp $=\sqrt {5^{2}-3^{2}}=3$ Therefore, $siny=\frac{3}{5}$ and $cosy=\frac{4}{5}$ Equation (1) becomes $sin2y=2(\frac{3}{5})(\frac{4}{5})$ Hence, $sin2y=\frac{24}{25}$ | 2018-07-23 00:37:52 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9383068084716797, "perplexity": 1339.1623614240407}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-30/segments/1531676594675.66/warc/CC-MAIN-20180722233159-20180723013159-00527.warc.gz"} | 224 |
https://cs.stackexchange.com/questions/98387/why-is-maxn-k-%D3%A8nk?noredirect=1 | # Why is max{n,k}= Ө(n+k) [duplicate]
• Use the definitions. Be mindful of what $n$, $k$ mean here, and how the definition of $\Theta$ extends to two parameters. (Hint: it doesn't, really.) – Raphael Oct 10 '18 at 6:15
Assuming n and k to be non-negative, $$n\leq n+k$$ and $$k\leq n+k$$. Hence,$$\max(n, k) \in \mathcal{O}(n+k)$$. Next, $$n+k≤2\max(n,k)$$. Hence, $$\max(n,k)\in\mathcal{\Omega}(n+k)$$.
Hence, we get that $$\max(n,k)\in \mathcal{\Theta}(n+k)$$. | 2019-08-20 12:48:44 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 6, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.7771881818771362, "perplexity": 903.3364016076249}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-35/segments/1566027315329.55/warc/CC-MAIN-20190820113425-20190820135425-00215.warc.gz"} | 176 |
https://www.sangakoo.com/en/unit/the-circle | # The circle
The perimeter of the circle is: $$P=2\cdot\pi r$$$The area of the circle is: $$A=\pi \cdot r^2$$$
Using proportions it is possible to find the area of a circular sector and the length of the arc: $$\frac{A_{sector}}{A_{cercle}}=\frac{A_{sector}}{\pi \cdot r^2}=\frac{\beta_{degrees}}{360^\circ} \\ \frac{I_{sector}}{perimetre}=\frac{I_{sector}}{2\pi \cdot r}=\frac{\beta_{degrees}}{360^\circ}$$\$
The same proportion can be used with $$\beta$$ in radians and changing $$360^\circ$$ for $$2\pi$$. | 2020-01-25 05:37:26 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 1.0000100135803223, "perplexity": 2924.233390403166}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-05/segments/1579251669967.70/warc/CC-MAIN-20200125041318-20200125070318-00021.warc.gz"} | 171 |
https://socratic.org/questions/how-do-you-simplify-sqrt3-div-sqrt12-sqrt5 | # How do you simplify sqrt3 div(sqrt12 - sqrt5)?
May 15, 2018
$\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2 \sqrt{3} - \sqrt{5}}$
#### Explanation:
First, we find the factors of $\sqrt{12}$ and simplify it further.
$\sqrt{12}$ = sqrt(4 xx 3 = $\sqrt{4} \times \sqrt{3}$ = $2 \times \sqrt{3}$
$\frac{\sqrt{3}}{\sqrt{12} - \sqrt{5}}$ ----->we know that $\sqrt{12}$ is $2 \times \sqrt{3}$ and substitute that for $\sqrt{12}$ as shown below:
$\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2 \times \sqrt{3} - \sqrt{5}}$ = $\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2 \sqrt{3} - \sqrt{5}}$ | 2021-06-21 00:56:53 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 12, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.7727001309394836, "perplexity": 1427.3028637498398}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-25/segments/1623488259200.84/warc/CC-MAIN-20210620235118-20210621025118-00131.warc.gz"} | 196 |
https://mersenneforum.org/showpost.php?s=419911a91763d554694822e6af65a970&p=335900&postcount=8 | View Single Post
2013-04-02, 21:03 #8 bsquared "Ben" Feb 2007 D6E16 Posts Looks like you are missing the factor base bounds. i.e., something like: Code: rlim: 300000000 alim: 300000000 The actual bounds could probably be optimized over the above, but these should be in the right ballpark. | 2021-05-11 20:05:33 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.22366146743297577, "perplexity": 5420.693977306561}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 20, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-21/segments/1620243989856.11/warc/CC-MAIN-20210511184216-20210511214216-00293.warc.gz"} | 85 |
https://homework.cpm.org/category/CCI_CT/textbook/pc3/chapter/11/lesson/11.2.1/problem/11-92 | ### Home > PC3 > Chapter 11 > Lesson 11.2.1 > Problem11-92
11-92.
Suppose Benny Bug is crawling on the graph of $y = f(x) \text{ as } x → ∞$ and thinks he is getting closer and closer to $y = 2$. Bertha Bug is crawling on the graph of $g(x) = 3 + f(x)$ as $x → ∞$. What number does Bertha think she is getting close to?
How does adding $3$ to a function value transform the graph? | 2020-05-26 23:02:37 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 5, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.5894823670387268, "perplexity": 1513.1772457480063}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-24/segments/1590347391923.3/warc/CC-MAIN-20200526222359-20200527012359-00090.warc.gz"} | 121 |
https://www.esaral.com/q/in-a-abc-if-a-4-b-3-91066 | # In a ∆ABC, if a = 4, b = 3,
Question:
In a $\triangle A B C$, if $a=4, b=3, A=\frac{\pi}{3}$. Then side $C$ is given by
Solution:
In ∆ABC
if $a=4, b=3, A=\frac{\pi}{3}$
Since $\cos A=\frac{b^{2}+c^{2}-a^{2}}{2 b c}$
i. e $\cos \frac{\pi}{3}=\frac{9+c^{2}-16}{2 \times 3 \times c}$
i. e $\frac{1}{2}=\frac{c^{2}-7}{6 c}$
i. e $3 c=c^{2}-7$
i. e $c^{2}-3 c-7=0$ | 2023-03-28 04:50:55 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9230767488479614, "perplexity": 6319.736860033567}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2023-14/segments/1679296948765.13/warc/CC-MAIN-20230328042424-20230328072424-00404.warc.gz"} | 190 |
https://lavelle.chem.ucla.edu/forum/viewtopic.php?f=75&t=27630&p=84295 | ## HW 9.37 calculating Hvap
JennyCKim1J
Posts: 51
Joined: Fri Sep 29, 2017 7:04 am
### HW 9.37 calculating Hvap
Can I calculate Hvap without using/given Hvap=Hvapor-Hliquid? Similarly, can I get Hsub or Hfus?
Angela 1K
Posts: 80
Joined: Fri Sep 29, 2017 7:05 am
### Re: HW 9.37 calculating Hvap
I know that in some previous question, the $\Delta H$vap has been given if you're asked to solve for something like $\Delta S$vap of a substance and also given the boiling point. | 2021-01-18 07:26:36 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 2, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.593540370464325, "perplexity": 12847.708772127886}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-04/segments/1610703514423.60/warc/CC-MAIN-20210118061434-20210118091434-00396.warc.gz"} | 158 |
https://noncommutativeanalysis.com/2012/12/19/ | ### The remarkable Hilbert space H^2 (part III – three open problems)
This is the last in the series of three posts on the d–shift space, which accompany/replace the colloquium talk I was supposed to give. The first two parts are available here and here. In this post I will discuss three open problems that I have been thinking about, which are formulated within the setting of $H^2_d$. | 2019-04-24 18:46:11 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 1, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.4618690311908722, "perplexity": 452.0196227594177}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 20, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-18/segments/1555578655155.88/warc/CC-MAIN-20190424174425-20190424200425-00406.warc.gz"} | 89 |
http://piping-designer.com/index.php/properties/thermodynamics/310-fahrenheit | # Fahrenheit
Written by Jerry Ratzlaff. Posted in Thermodynamics
Fahrenheit is a unit of temperature used in the United States and a few other countries. Celsius is most commonly used through the world.
## formula
$$T_{°F}=32° \;+\; \left( \frac{9}{5} \right) T_ {°C} \;$$
$$T_{°F}=459.67° \;-\; \left( \frac{9}{5} \right) T_ {°K} \;$$
$$T_{°F}= 459.67° \;-\; T_ {°R} \;$$
Where:
$$T$$ = temperature
$$C$$ = celsius
$$F$$ = fahrenheit
$$K$$ = kelvin
$$R$$ = rankine | 2017-05-23 04:55:11 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.799301266670227, "perplexity": 5719.164321429886}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2017-22/segments/1495463607369.90/warc/CC-MAIN-20170523045144-20170523065144-00567.warc.gz"} | 179 |
https://www.overleaf.com/blog/568-tip-of-the-week-use-regular-expression-syntax-in-search | • ## Tip of the Week: Use Regular Expression Syntax in Search
Posted by Ryan on October 12, 2017Did you know you can use regular expression syntax to search in your project? Regexp also works when you're using find and replace. Click the Find button at the top of the editor (or use the keyboard shortcut Ctrl-F (Command F on a Mac), and type in your expression. You can find more information about search and replace in your project here, and more information about regexp here!
Tags: | 2020-06-04 05:29:39 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 1, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.18031804263591766, "perplexity": 1808.4460161039688}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-24/segments/1590347439019.86/warc/CC-MAIN-20200604032435-20200604062435-00067.warc.gz"} | 106 |
https://socratic.org/questions/what-is-the-standard-form-of-y-2x-3-x-6-x | # What is the standard form of y=2x(3-x)(6-x)?
Jan 31, 2016
$y = 2 x \left(3 - x\right) \left(6 - x\right)$
First solve $\left(3 - x\right) \left(6 - x\right)$ using foil method:
Foil method:
So,
$\left(3 - x\right) \left(6 - x\right) = 18 - 3 x - 6 + {x}^{2} = \left(18 - 9 x + {x}^{2}\right) = \left({x}^{2} - 9 x + 18\right)$ In standard notation.
$\rightarrow y = 2 x \left({x}^{2} - 9 x + 18\right)$
Use distributive property to multiply:
$\rightarrow y = 2 {x}^{3} - 18 {x}^{2} + 36 x$ | 2022-05-28 11:30:15 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 5, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.29705220460891724, "perplexity": 11715.327802667845}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 20, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-21/segments/1652663016373.86/warc/CC-MAIN-20220528093113-20220528123113-00755.warc.gz"} | 216 |
http://misztal.edu.pl/publications/a.+tomczyk/ | ## Publications by A. Tomczyk
### Conference Papers by A. Tomczyk
, , , , and
Detection of Elongated Structures with Hierarchical Active Partitions and CEC-Based Image Representation
Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Computer Recognition Systems CORES 2015, Springer International Publishing, 2016, ISBN 978-3-319-26227-7
cec hierarchical active partition structural description
, | 2019-02-20 00:10:52 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9366509914398193, "perplexity": 8863.419779342647}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-09/segments/1550247493803.26/warc/CC-MAIN-20190219223509-20190220005509-00066.warc.gz"} | 92 |
https://informesia.com/25/what-is-like-fraction | # What is Like Fraction?
1 view
What is the Definition of Like Fraction?
Like Fraction : Fraction having the same denominator but different numerators are called like fractions.
Examples : 3/12, 5/12, 8/12 etc... | 2021-10-17 00:36:54 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9494738578796387, "perplexity": 3972.8700363403104}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-43/segments/1634323585045.2/warc/CC-MAIN-20211016231019-20211017021019-00255.warc.gz"} | 52 |
https://docs.getml.com/latest/api/roles/getml.data.roles.unused_float.html | # unused_float¶
getml.data.roles.unused_float = 'unused_float'
Marks a FloatColumn as unused.
The associated column will be neither used in the data model nor during feature learning or prediction. | 2022-01-22 12:43:59 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.30289164185523987, "perplexity": 10385.597579768244}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-05/segments/1642320303845.33/warc/CC-MAIN-20220122103819-20220122133819-00015.warc.gz"} | 42 |
https://www.gradesaver.com/textbooks/math/algebra/algebra-1/chapter-2-solving-equations-2-7-solving-proportions-practice-and-problem-solving-exercises-page-128/49 | ## Algebra 1
$b=-\frac{2}{3}$
Use cross multiplication since the variable is in the numerator and denominator. $\frac{3b}{b-4}=\frac{3}{7}$ cross multiply $21b=3(b-4)$ distributive property $21b=3b-12$ subtract 3b from both sides $21b-3b=3b-12-3b$ combine like terms $18b=-12$ divide both sides by 18 $18b\div18=-12\div18$ $b=-\frac{2}{3}$ | 2022-05-21 03:37:47 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9296317100524902, "perplexity": 489.91110498464735}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-21/segments/1652662534773.36/warc/CC-MAIN-20220521014358-20220521044358-00594.warc.gz"} | 127 |
https://competitive-exam.in/questions/discuss/two-trains-are-running-at-40-km-hr-and-20-km-hr | # Two trains are running at 40 km/hr and 20 km/hr respectively in the same direction. Fast train completely passes a man sitting in the slower train in 5 seconds. What is the length of the fast train ?
$27\frac{7}{9}$
$28\frac{7}{9}$
$29\frac{7}{9}$
$30\frac{7}{9}$
Please do not use chat terms. Example: avoid using "grt" instead of "great". | 2021-06-15 23:15:09 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 5, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.4407823383808136, "perplexity": 1137.8453274159745}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-25/segments/1623487621627.41/warc/CC-MAIN-20210615211046-20210616001046-00601.warc.gz"} | 106 |
https://www.gradesaver.com/textbooks/math/algebra/elementary-and-intermediate-algebra-concepts-and-applications-6th-edition/chapter-12-exponential-functions-and-logarithmic-functions-12-1-composite-functions-and-inverse-functions-12-1-exercise-set-page-788/79 | ## Elementary and Intermediate Algebra: Concepts & Applications (6th Edition)
$\displaystyle \frac{x^{12}}{9y^{8}}$
... apply: $(abc)^{n}=a^{n}b^{n}c^{n}$ $=(-1)^{-2}(3)^{-2}(x^{-6})^{-2}(y^{4})^{-2}\qquad$ ... apply $(a^{m})^{n}=a^{mn}$, and $a^{-n}=\displaystyle \frac{1}{a^{n}}$ $=[(-1)^{2}]^{-1}(\displaystyle \frac{1}{3^{2}})x^{12}y^{-8}$ $=\displaystyle \frac{1^{-1}x^{12}}{3^{2}y^{8}}$ $=\displaystyle \frac{x^{12}}{9y^{8}}$ | 2019-12-15 18:03:34 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.5099489092826843, "perplexity": 2502.597446051057}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-51/segments/1575541309137.92/warc/CC-MAIN-20191215173718-20191215201718-00170.warc.gz"} | 188 |
http://clay6.com/qa/35732/the-external-solution-having-less-concentration-than-the-cell-sap-is-called | Browse Questions
# The external solution having less concentration than the cell sap is called
$\begin{array}{1 1}(A)\;\text{Hypertonic solution}\\(B)\;\text{Isotonic solution}\\(C)\;\text{Hypotonic solution}\\(D)\;\text{Ultratonic solution}\end{array}$
The external solution having less concentration than the cell sap is called hypotonic solution
Hence (C) is the correct answer. | 2016-10-24 05:23:31 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9065760970115662, "perplexity": 6143.015010721114}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-44/segments/1476988719468.5/warc/CC-MAIN-20161020183839-00192-ip-10-171-6-4.ec2.internal.warc.gz"} | 104 |
http://www.goqna.com/24115/runescape-2007-gold-rsorder-summer-special-offers-until-aug | How can I get up to $10 off Runescape 2007 Gold on RSorder as Summer Special Offers until Aug 16? asked Aug 13 in Others | 5 views ## 1 Answer 0 votes RSorder Summer Special Offers event is online now! Until Aug 16, RSorder offers up to$10 coupons for RS gold, OSRS gold and other products.
Three coupon codes are offered: $3 off code "RCM3" for$50+ orders, $5 off code "RCM5" for$80+ orders and $10 off code "RCM1" for$150+ orders. You can enjoy the discount by applying the corresponding codes when you pay. | 2020-09-19 18:18:00 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.21385633945465088, "perplexity": 9106.225043857297}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-40/segments/1600400192783.34/warc/CC-MAIN-20200919173334-20200919203334-00342.warc.gz"} | 143 |
https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/atwood-machine-formula.134213/ | # Atwood Machine formula
1. Sep 30, 2006
### RufusTFirefly
With an Atwood Machine, I understand that the formula for calculating T can be calculated with two simultaneous equations.
T-m1g=m1a
a= (m2 - m1
(
T – m1
2. Sep 30, 2006 | 2016-12-09 06:25:22 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8316078782081604, "perplexity": 3790.186918708244}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-50/segments/1480698542686.84/warc/CC-MAIN-20161202170902-00258-ip-10-31-129-80.ec2.internal.warc.gz"} | 77 |
https://manual.q-chem.com/5.3/sect_basis_symbol.html | # 8.3 Basis Set Symbolic Representation
Examples are given in the tables below and follow the standard format generally adopted for specifying basis sets. The single exception applies to additional diffuse functions. These are best inserted in a similar manner to the polarization functions; in parentheses with the light atom designation following heavy atom designation. (i.e., heavy, light). Use a period (.) as a place-holder (see examples). | 2020-07-16 16:15:51 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 172, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.608135461807251, "perplexity": 3162.831553009938}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-29/segments/1593657172545.84/warc/CC-MAIN-20200716153247-20200716183247-00164.warc.gz"} | 85 |
https://brilliant.org/problems/welcome-2016-part-6/ | # Welcome 2016! Part 6
Algebra Level 4
$\dfrac{ab}{a+b}=3 \ , \ \dfrac{bc}{b+c}=4 \ , \ \dfrac{ca}{c+a}=5$
Let $$a,b$$ and $$c$$ be real numbers satisfying all 3 equations above. Given that $$\dfrac{abc}{ab+ac+bc}$$ is equal to $$\dfrac mn$$, where $$m$$ and $$n$$ are coprime positive integers, find the value of $$m+n$$.
× | 2018-01-18 19:58:22 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8160410523414612, "perplexity": 247.07996117012038}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-05/segments/1516084887600.12/warc/CC-MAIN-20180118190921-20180118210921-00061.warc.gz"} | 123 |
https://healpy.readthedocs.io/en/1.12.10/generated/healpy.projector.CartesianProj.xy2ij.html | # healpy.projector.CartesianProj.xy2ij¶
CartesianProj.xy2ij(self, x, y=None)
From position in the projection plane to image array index (Cartesian).
Input:
• x : if y is None, x[0], x[1] define the position in Cartesian plane.
• y : if defined, x,y define the position in projection plane.
• projinfo : additional projection information.
Return:
• i,j : image array indices. | 2022-01-17 01:33:33 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.3854764997959137, "perplexity": 13212.54949077398}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-05/segments/1642320300253.51/warc/CC-MAIN-20220117000754-20220117030754-00525.warc.gz"} | 98 |
https://sshekhar.page/category/active-learning/ | # Active Learning
## Active Learning in Bandits and MDPs
Optimal scheme for allocating samples to learn $K$ distributions uniformly well.
## Active Learning for Classification With Abstention
A minimax near-optimal active learning algorithm for classification with abstention. | 2021-11-27 17:03:55 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.6423882246017456, "perplexity": 14274.406806648189}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-49/segments/1637964358208.31/warc/CC-MAIN-20211127163427-20211127193427-00142.warc.gz"} | 55 |
https://zbmath.org/?q=an:0435.43005 | # zbMATH — the first resource for mathematics
Homomorphisms and derivations on weighted convolution algebras. (English) Zbl 0435.43005
##### MSC:
43A20 $$L^1$$-algebras on groups, semigroups, etc. 43A22 Homomorphisms and multipliers of function spaces on groups, semigroups, etc.
Full Text: | 2021-12-06 00:12:25 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.25621452927589417, "perplexity": 14839.546437296985}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-49/segments/1637964363226.68/warc/CC-MAIN-20211205221915-20211206011915-00553.warc.gz"} | 88 |
http://gandalflechner.eu/research/talks/deformations-of-quantum-field-theories-the-construction-of-models-and-tbar-t-deformations | Home > International Conferences, Talks > Deformations of quantum field theories, the construction of models, and $T\bar T$-deformations
## Deformations of quantum field theories, the construction of models, and $T\bar T$-deformations
April 9th, 2019
Categories: Tags: | 2021-04-23 12:23:59 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.32696351408958435, "perplexity": 5004.758791611035}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-17/segments/1618039617701.99/warc/CC-MAIN-20210423101141-20210423131141-00280.warc.gz"} | 72 |
https://www.emathhelp.net/webassign-answers/?aid=8 | Question
How long will it take an investment to double in value if the interest rate is % compounded continuously?
It will take years | 2019-03-21 16:17:36 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8279767036437988, "perplexity": 920.5546993656643}, "config": {"markdown_headings": false, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-13/segments/1552912202526.24/warc/CC-MAIN-20190321152638-20190321174638-00117.warc.gz"} | 26 |
https://www.studyadda.com/question-bank/halogen-family_q58/1495/114011 | • # question_answer The electrolysis of a certain liquid resulted in the formation of hydrogen at the cathode and chlorine at the anode. The liquid is [EAMCET 1979] A) Pure water B) ${{H}_{2}}S{{O}_{4}}$ solution C) $NaCl$solution in water D) $CuC{{l}_{2}}$ solution in water
$2NaCl+2{{H}_{2}}O\,\,\to \,\,2NaOH+\underset{\text{(anode)}}{\mathop{C{{l}_{2}}}}\,+\underset{\text{(cathode)}}{\mathop{{{H}_{2}}}}\,$ | 2021-06-13 06:00:34 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.742584228515625, "perplexity": 3281.7552156850857}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-25/segments/1623487600396.21/warc/CC-MAIN-20210613041713-20210613071713-00469.warc.gz"} | 149 |
https://socratic.org/questions/how-do-you-use-the-change-of-base-formula-and-a-calculator-to-evaluate-the-logar-6 | # How do you use the Change of Base Formula and a calculator to evaluate the logarithm log_9 2.15?
Sep 16, 2015
I found: $0.3483$
#### Explanation:
The Change of Base Formula allows you to write:
${\log}_{a} b = \frac{{\log}_{c} b}{{\log}_{c} a}$
and change your base from $a$ to the new base $c$.
We can choose, as new base, $e$ and use natural logs, $\ln$, that can be evaluated using a pocket calculator and get:
${\log}_{9} \left(2.15\right) = \frac{\ln 2.15}{\ln 9} = 0.3483$ | 2019-07-20 03:13:08 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 7, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8961576819419861, "perplexity": 513.3363155687961}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-30/segments/1563195526408.59/warc/CC-MAIN-20190720024812-20190720050812-00015.warc.gz"} | 166 |
https://studyadda.com/question-bank/topic-test-photo-electric-effect-x-rays-matter-waves_q24/5959503/519999 | • # question_answer An electron of mass m when accelerated through a potential difference V has de-Broglie wavelength $\lambda$. The de-Broglie wavelength associated with a proton of mass M accelerated through the same potential difference will be A) $\lambda \frac{m}{M}$ B) $\lambda \sqrt{\frac{m}{M}}$ C) $\lambda \frac{M}{m}$ D) $\lambda \sqrt{\frac{M}{m}}$
[b] $\lambda =\frac{h}{\sqrt{2mE}}$ $\Rightarrow$ $\lambda \propto \frac{1}{\sqrt{m}}$ (E = same) | 2021-12-09 00:07:42 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.6623373031616211, "perplexity": 428.4849459965688}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-49/segments/1637964363641.20/warc/CC-MAIN-20211209000407-20211209030407-00398.warc.gz"} | 141 |
http://doswa.com/2010/04/03/client-side-prediction.html | # Client-side Prediction :: 03 Apr 2010
I was reading about client-side prediction in the context of video game physics today and thought of an idea: client-side prediction on streamed video (e.g. on Skype or similar video chats). Each pixel could be assigned a velocity and "color velocity" ($$\frac{d \, \text{red}}{dt}$$, $$\frac{d \, \text{blue}}{dt}$$, $$\frac{d \, \text{green}}{dt}$$). A velocity grid method like the one described in Practical Fluid Dynamics 1 and 2 comes to mind. | 2013-06-20 10:10:45 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.7449328303337097, "perplexity": 2262.972790175141}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2013-20/segments/1368711406217/warc/CC-MAIN-20130516133646-00034-ip-10-60-113-184.ec2.internal.warc.gz"} | 134 |
https://www.gradesaver.com/textbooks/math/algebra/algebra-1-common-core-15th-edition/chapter-3-solving-inequalities-3-1-inequalities-and-their-graphs-practice-and-problem-solving-exercises-page-169/50 | ## Algebra 1: Common Core (15th Edition)
35 is greater than or equal to $w$.
The inequality is $35≥w$. $≥$ reads as greater than or equal to. If the inequality is read across, it states that $35$ is greater than or equal to $w$. | 2020-02-23 09:19:33 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.5722848176956177, "perplexity": 203.58824364005102}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.3, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-10/segments/1581875145747.6/warc/CC-MAIN-20200223062700-20200223092700-00209.warc.gz"} | 66 |
https://byjus.com/question-answer/the-following-histogram-shows-the-number-of-literate-females-in-the-age-group-of-10-5/ | Question
# The following histogram shows the number of literate females in the age group of $$10$$ to $$40$$ years in a town:In which age group literate females are the least?
Solution
## Age group of $$10-15$$ years has the lowest literate females from the graph.Mathematics
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View More | 2022-01-17 04:21:14 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.6964847445487976, "perplexity": 7171.349541197201}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-05/segments/1642320300289.37/warc/CC-MAIN-20220117031001-20220117061001-00488.warc.gz"} | 85 |
https://socratic.org/questions/how-do-you-rationalize-the-denominator-and-simplify-4-2sqrt5-6-5sqrt5 | # How do you rationalize the denominator and simplify (4-2sqrt5)/(6-5sqrt5)?
Mar 27, 2016
$\frac{26 - 8 \sqrt{5}}{89}$
#### Explanation:
Multiply the numerator and the denominator by the conjugate $6 + 5 \sqrt{5}$ of the denominator.
Use $\left(a - b\right) \left(a + b\right) = \left({a}^{2} - {b}^{2}\right)$ to simplify the denominator.
Expand the product in the numerator.
The ratio simplifies to $\frac{26 - 8 \sqrt{5}}{89}$ | 2021-06-13 16:41:10 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 4, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9992268085479736, "perplexity": 724.3368053189995}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 5, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-25/segments/1623487610196.46/warc/CC-MAIN-20210613161945-20210613191945-00548.warc.gz"} | 141 |
https://brilliant.org/problems/newtons-nightmares/ | Newton's Nightmares
Algebra Level 5
Determine for what value of $$x$$ is the difference between $$9$$ times the third term of binomial expansion of $$\left( \frac{\sqrt{2^{x-1}}}{\sqrt[3]{2}}+\sqrt[3]{4}\cdot 2^{\frac{x}{2}}\right) ^m$$ and the fifth term of the same expansion equal to $$240$$, if it is known, that the difference between the log of the tripled binomial coefficient of the fourth term of expansion and the log of the binomial coefficient of the second term is equal to $$1$$.
× | 2017-07-25 04:51:23 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.7906954288482666, "perplexity": 126.84973869746415}, "config": {"markdown_headings": false, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2017-30/segments/1500549424961.59/warc/CC-MAIN-20170725042318-20170725062318-00165.warc.gz"} | 140 |
https://aliquote.org/micro/2019-09-30-11-29-00/ | # aliquote
## < a quantity that can be divided into another a whole number of time />
Programming Algorithms: Trees. Of note, it is not limited to binary trees, and it discusses AVL trees, heaps and tries. #lisp | 2022-10-02 02:48:27 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.22257697582244873, "perplexity": 1304.5984735115242}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-40/segments/1664030337244.17/warc/CC-MAIN-20221002021540-20221002051540-00153.warc.gz"} | 49 |
http://www.chegg.com/homework-help/questions-and-answers/the-following-four-problems-are-about-the-following-situation-a-photon-with-the-given-ener-q3277992 | ## A quick description of your question...
The following four problems are about the following situation: A photon with the given energy/frequency/wavelength is emitted the Bohr Hydrogen atom. You determine what transition an electron made to emit that photon. 5) E = 10.2 eV. ANSWER: n = ? to n=? 6) E = 2.04 x 10-18 J ANSWER: n = ? to n=? 7) l = 656 nm. ANSWER: n = ? to n=? 8) f = 3.14 x 1014 Hz ANSWER: n = ? to n=? | 2013-05-23 10:00:03 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.835731565952301, "perplexity": 2130.5439683410286}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2013-20/segments/1368703108201/warc/CC-MAIN-20130516111828-00072-ip-10-60-113-184.ec2.internal.warc.gz"} | 135 |
https://www.esaral.com/q/consider-the-following-frequency-distribution-28899/ | Consider the following frequency distribution
Question:
Consider the following frequency distribution
The upper limit of the median class is
(a) 7
(b) 17.5
(c) 18
(d) 18.5
Solution: | 2022-06-25 16:36:34 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.954369306564331, "perplexity": 7989.0580153360515}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": false, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-27/segments/1656103036077.8/warc/CC-MAIN-20220625160220-20220625190220-00370.warc.gz"} | 49 |
https://ask.sagemath.org/answers/44083/revisions/ | The field KE = GF(2^(e*2)) has characteristic 2, hence every even number (in particular every nontrivial power of 2) will be equal to zero, which is what you got. | 2022-09-25 23:22:07 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9566072821617126, "perplexity": 203.6870324943536}, "config": {"markdown_headings": false, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-40/segments/1664030334620.49/warc/CC-MAIN-20220925225000-20220926015000-00213.warc.gz"} | 45 |
https://ee.gateoverflow.in/553/gate2014-2-7 | The switch SW shown in the circuit is kept at position $'1'$ for a long duration. At $t$ = $0+$, the switchis moved to position $'2'$. Assuming |$V_o2|$ > |$V_o1$|, the voltage $v_c$(t) across the capacitor is
1. $V_c (t)=-V_{o2}(1-e^{-t/2RC})-V_{o1}$
2. $V_c (t)=V_{o2}(1-e^{-t/2RC})+V_{o1}$
3. $V_c (t)=-$($V_{o2}$+$V_{o1}$)$(1-e^{-t/2RC})-V_{o1}$
4. $V_c (t)=$($V_{o2}$+$V_{o1}$)$(1-e^{-t/2RC})+V_{o1}$ | 2019-11-17 19:35:07 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.7777841091156006, "perplexity": 3007.8967508213614}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 20, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-47/segments/1573496669276.41/warc/CC-MAIN-20191117192728-20191117220728-00510.warc.gz"} | 202 |
https://pypi.org/project/zed/ | Thin wrapper for integrating ZeroMQ sockets into the Twisted reactore
# zed
Zed is a thin wrapper for integrating ZeroMQ sockets into the Twisted reactor. It's based on a very old version of txZMQ but stripped down to just the minimum required to integrate ZeroMQ sockets into the reactor.
## Project details
Uploaded source
Uploaded py2 | 2023-02-09 03:26:38 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.5155786275863647, "perplexity": 13043.410170875493}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2023-06/segments/1674764501066.53/warc/CC-MAIN-20230209014102-20230209044102-00355.warc.gz"} | 74 |
https://quantnet.com/members/iulian.734/recent-content | # Recent content by Iulian
1. ### Polynomial regression help?
I think you can proceed as follows: Denote by J(\alpha, \beta_1, \beta_2) the obj. function. Then write down the FOC (the gradient should be zero). You will get a 3x3 linear system to solve w/r to \alpha, \beta_1, \beta_2. You can find the system here Least Squares Fit of a Quadratic Curve to...
2. ### New Quantnet members say hi
Hi all, my name is Iulian and I work as a quant developer. I have 2 MSc and a PhD in applied math. Iulian | 2021-09-18 14:08:45 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8864502310752869, "perplexity": 2322.6154385190994}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-39/segments/1631780056476.66/warc/CC-MAIN-20210918123546-20210918153546-00718.warc.gz"} | 146 |
https://socratic.org/questions/what-is-the-maximum-number-of-covalent-bonds-a-carbon-atom-can-form-with-other-a | # What is the maximum number of covalent bonds a carbon atom can form with other atoms?
And so carbon is tetravalent...(or more properly quadrivalent..) Ad organic chemistry provides a wealth of examples where carbon has the FOUR COVALENT bonds to hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, or other atoms....or to carbon itself...and unsaturated bonding, i.e. $C = C$, and $C \equiv C$ functions, is also a REAL possibility.... | 2022-01-27 10:41:27 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 2, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.5336176156997681, "perplexity": 2106.864787415521}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-05/segments/1642320305260.61/warc/CC-MAIN-20220127103059-20220127133059-00517.warc.gz"} | 98 |
https://ask.openstack.org/en/answers/7874/revisions/ | Ask Your Question
# Revision history [back]
Yes, if you want security groups to work. Your nova.conf on the 2nd compute node needs to have:
libvirt_vif_driver=nova.virt.libvirt.vif.LibvirtHybridOVSBridgeDriver | 2020-11-28 21:08:58 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.6509696245193481, "perplexity": 7594.603511068307}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": false}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-50/segments/1606141195745.90/warc/CC-MAIN-20201128184858-20201128214858-00184.warc.gz"} | 55 |
https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/increasing-sequence.98566/ | # Increasing Sequence
Icebreaker
Suppose f:[a,b)->R is such that lim(x->b-)=+inf. Prove that there exists an increasing sequence {x_n} in (a,b) such that f(x_n)>n for all n.
I don't know where to start. It would be easy if I can prove that f is strictly increasing after some point. f might not be continuous so I can't simply look for all f(x) in the form x^2 or something... Too many possibilities. Any pointers will be helpful!
Last edited by a moderator: | 2020-07-16 17:42:01 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8124464154243469, "perplexity": 412.51044324976436}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-29/segments/1593657172545.84/warc/CC-MAIN-20200716153247-20200716183247-00352.warc.gz"} | 121 |
https://brilliant.org/problems/sandwich-thm/ | # Summing Tiny Floors
Calculus Level 2
$\large \displaystyle\lim_{n \to \infty} \dfrac{\lfloor x \rfloor+\lfloor 2x \rfloor+\lfloor 3x \rfloor+\cdots+\lfloor nx \rfloor}{n^2}$
Let $x$ be a constant real number. Find the value of the limit above in terms of $x$.
Notation: $\lfloor \cdot \rfloor$ denotes the floor function.
× | 2020-12-02 03:14:59 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 8, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9830448627471924, "perplexity": 863.1312594355174}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-50/segments/1606141686635.62/warc/CC-MAIN-20201202021743-20201202051743-00623.warc.gz"} | 113 |
https://www.statsmodels.org/stable/generated/statsmodels.discrete.discrete_model.DiscreteModel.initialize.html | # statsmodels.discrete.discrete_model.DiscreteModel.initialize¶
DiscreteModel.initialize()[source]
Initialize is called by statsmodels.model.LikelihoodModel.__init__ and should contain any preprocessing that needs to be done for a model. | 2020-02-18 01:16:15 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.23273371160030365, "perplexity": 1172.135874695229}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 5, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2020-10/segments/1581875143455.25/warc/CC-MAIN-20200217235417-20200218025417-00179.warc.gz"} | 49 |
https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/661895/is-this-morphism-flat | # Is this morphism flat?
Suppose $X$ is a smooth projective curve over an algebraically closed field $k$.
Is the morphism $X \to \operatorname{Spec}(k)$ necessarily flat?
What kind of conditions on the above morphism are equivalent to the hypothesis of $X$ being smooth and projective?
• To answer your second question, $X$ is smooth and projective iff the morphism is smooth and projective. I'm not sure what else you could expect. – user64687 Feb 3 '14 at 14:02 | 2019-10-17 14:11:30 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9973001480102539, "perplexity": 142.9550411119021}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-43/segments/1570986675316.51/warc/CC-MAIN-20191017122657-20191017150157-00268.warc.gz"} | 121 |
http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/87641/is-there-a-name-for-the-this-kind-of-recursive-formula | # Is there a name for the this kind of recursive formula?
$a_{-i}=0$ for all positive i. We have the recurrence
$$a_n = \sum_{i=1}^\infty b_ia_{n-m_i}$$
Where $m_i>0$ for all $i$.
-
aren't those the catalan numbers? what's $b_i$? – Harry Stern Dec 2 '11 at 6:19
$b_i$ and $m_i$ are two infinite sequences. As far as I know, partition numbers can be expressed in this way. – Chao Xu Dec 2 '11 at 6:26 | 2016-06-01 00:15:18 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.930059552192688, "perplexity": 654.8692487228681}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-22/segments/1464053252010.41/warc/CC-MAIN-20160524012732-00189-ip-10-185-217-139.ec2.internal.warc.gz"} | 141 |
https://motls.blogspot.com/2006/09/at-universities-little-learned-from.html?m=1 | ## Wednesday, September 13, 2006
### At universities, little learned from 9/11
The left-wing Boston Globe has a surprising essay by
that argues, focusing on the example of Harvard, that the universities and especially various discourses such as feminism and multiculturalism haven't learned much from 9/11. Mansfield ends up in an optimistic way: it is better that the leftists are confused rather than radicalized, and it is also good if they keep their own principles. | 2019-10-15 14:20:25 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 1, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.38410380482673645, "perplexity": 6877.287477790178}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-43/segments/1570986659097.10/warc/CC-MAIN-20191015131723-20191015155223-00293.warc.gz"} | 103 |
https://www.albert.io/ie/act-math/absolute-value-from-graph | ?
Free Version
Difficult
Absolute Value From Graph
ACTMAT-FOEVBY
The graph on the number line below represents the solution to which of the following absolute value inequalities?
A
$|y-1|\ge 3$
B
$|y-1|\le 3$
C
$|y-3|\ge 1$
D
$|y+3|\le 1$
E
$|y+2|\le 4$ | 2016-12-07 14:35:37 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.38075020909309387, "perplexity": 1818.6885910239353}, "config": {"markdown_headings": false, "markdown_code": false, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-50/segments/1480698542213.61/warc/CC-MAIN-20161202170902-00114-ip-10-31-129-80.ec2.internal.warc.gz"} | 98 |
http://rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/1850/whats-an-appropriate-banality-rating-for-the-imbued | # What's an appropriate banality rating for the Imbued?
In the old World of Darkness game Changeling: the Dreaming, no specific banality rating is given for hunters (as in Hunter: the Reckoning). Is there a more appropriate rating than the standard human rating of 6–7? If so, what is it, and what is a lore justification for it?
-
@Jeremiah: Why the tag edit? – Bill Ayakatubby Sep 18 '10 at 2:16 | 2016-06-27 00:26:50 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8037877678871155, "perplexity": 4183.129547460048}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-26/segments/1466783395613.65/warc/CC-MAIN-20160624154955-00181-ip-10-164-35-72.ec2.internal.warc.gz"} | 108 |
https://studydaddy.com/question/strategy-planning | # strategy planning
While you need to be familiar with all of them, for this assignment you'll choose three of the principles to explain in your own words. Include an example scenario for each that demonstrates the principle. Justify why the principle is important for IT Strategy or Tactics. Find at least one additional reference for each one you choose. | 2017-04-26 00:15:33 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8477495908737183, "perplexity": 619.1083590207915}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2017-17/segments/1492917121000.17/warc/CC-MAIN-20170423031201-00240-ip-10-145-167-34.ec2.internal.warc.gz"} | 70 |
http://nrich.maths.org/6253/solution?nomenu=1 | $UK$ means $10U + K$ and $SMC$ means $100S + 10M + C$, so we have $$10U+K+4=100S+10M+C$$ The left hand side is at most $$10 \times 9 + 8 + 4 = 102$$ so $$100S+10M+C \leq 102$$ Therefore $S \leq 1$, so $S=1$ (since it can't be zero). So $$10M+C \leq2$$ So $M=0$
$M$ has the lowest value. | 2016-07-23 13:19:53 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9790825247764587, "perplexity": 45.2010220863845}, "config": {"markdown_headings": false, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-30/segments/1469257822598.11/warc/CC-MAIN-20160723071022-00316-ip-10-185-27-174.ec2.internal.warc.gz"} | 128 |
http://aliceinfo.cern.ch/ArtSubmission/node/2994 | # Figure 7
Transverse momentum spectra of charged pions (left), kaons (middle), and (anti)protons (right) measured in p-Pb collisions at $\sqrt{s_{\rm NN}} = 5.02$ TeV. Statistical and systematic uncertainties are plotted as vertical error bars and boxes, respectively. The spectra (measured for NSD events and for different V0A multiplicity classes) have been scaled by the indicated factors in the legend for better visibility. | 2017-12-18 12:48:48 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9364557862281799, "perplexity": 3710.625051920969}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 5, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2017-51/segments/1512948616132.89/warc/CC-MAIN-20171218122309-20171218144309-00612.warc.gz"} | 102 |
https://www.gradesaver.com/textbooks/math/algebra/intermediate-algebra-6th-edition/chapter-5-section-5-7-factoring-by-special-products-exercise-set-page-309/15 | ## Intermediate Algebra (6th Edition)
$\left(\dfrac{1}{3}-2z\right)\left(\dfrac{1}{3}+2z\right)$
Using $a^2-b^2=(a+b)(a-b)$ or the factoring of the difference of two squares, then, \begin{align*} \dfrac{1}{9}-4z^2 \Rightarrow \left(\dfrac{1}{3}-2z\right)\left(\dfrac{1}{3}+2z\right) .\end{align*} | 2019-04-22 16:25:26 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9988781213760376, "perplexity": 4588.171282082965}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.3, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-18/segments/1555578558125.45/warc/CC-MAIN-20190422155337-20190422181337-00148.warc.gz"} | 124 |
http://clay6.com/qa/17979/a-metalic-ring-of-radius-r-and-cross-sectional-area-a-is-fitted-into-a-wood | Browse Questions
# A metalic ring of radius r and cross sectional area A is fitted into a wooden circular disc of radius $R(R > 1)$. If the Young's modulus of the material of the ring is Y, the force with which the metal ring expands is :
$\begin {array} {1 1} (a)\;\frac{AYR}{r} & \quad (b)\;\frac{AY(R-r)}{r} \\ (c)\;\frac{Y(R-r)}{Ar}a & \quad (d)\;\frac{YR}{AR} \end {array}$
Can you answer this question?
$(B)\;\frac{AY(R-r)}{r}$
Hence B is the correct answer.
answered Mar 24, 2014 by | 2017-05-24 07:55:06 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 2, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.79267418384552, "perplexity": 556.6609239691832}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.3, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2017-22/segments/1495463607806.46/warc/CC-MAIN-20170524074252-20170524094252-00204.warc.gz"} | 166 |
https://math.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Analysis/Supplemental_Modules_(Analysis)/Ordinary_Differential_Equations | Skip to main content
# Ordinary Differential Equations
These Core Modules are complemented by modules in Lebl's Differential Equations for Engineers Textmap. Please check there for additional information.
Ordinary Differential Equations is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.
• Was this article helpful? | 2023-02-08 06:49:22 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.991545557975769, "perplexity": 1226.8213586786048}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.3, "absolute_threshold": 20, "end_threshold": 5, "enable": false}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2023-06/segments/1674764500719.31/warc/CC-MAIN-20230208060523-20230208090523-00843.warc.gz"} | 71 |
http://openstudy.com/updates/4f197d37e4b04992dd22170c | ## anonymous 4 years ago The hypotenuse of a right triangle is 12 centimeters, and the shorter leg is 6 centimeters. Find the length of the other leg.
1. Mertsj
|dw:1327070475103:dw|
2. LollyLau
let remaining leg = x cm. 12^2=6^2+x^2
3. LollyLau
144=36+x^2 x^2=108 x=sqrt(108)
4. LollyLau
using pythagoras theorem again.
5. Mertsj
|dw:1327070501719:dw|
6. anonymous
$perpendicular ^{2}+base ^{2}=hypotenuse ^{2}$ $12^{2}-6^{2}=p ^{2}$ $p=\sqrt{144-36}$ $p=\sqrt{108}$ | 2016-10-21 13:06:35 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.46023350954055786, "perplexity": 5103.307385445067}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.3, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2016-44/segments/1476988718278.43/warc/CC-MAIN-20161020183838-00398-ip-10-171-6-4.ec2.internal.warc.gz"} | 190 |
http://www.chegg.com/homework-help/questions-and-answers/5-tco3-dsp-sampling-rate-50-hz-used-sample-following-analog-signal-x-t-5cos-4t-u-t-2cos-40-q2560161 | 5. (TCO3) A DSP system with a sampling rate of 50 Hz is used to sample the following analog signal x(t)=5cos(4t)u(t)+2cos(40t)u(t). Is the sampling condition satisfied? (Points : 3)
The condition is satisfied.
The condition is not satisfied.
It cannot be determined.
There is no condition. | 2013-05-23 08:49:35 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8271881341934204, "perplexity": 2101.528078281053}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2013-20/segments/1368703057881/warc/CC-MAIN-20130516111737-00016-ip-10-60-113-184.ec2.internal.warc.gz"} | 80 |
https://search.r-project.org/CRAN/refmans/AlphaSimR/html/solveMVM.html | solveMVM {AlphaSimR} R Documentation
## Solve Multivariate Model
### Description
Solves a multivariate mixed model of form Y=X\beta+Zu+e
### Usage
solveMVM(Y, X, Z, K, tol = 1e-06, maxIter = 1000L)
### Arguments
Y a matrix with n rows and q columns X a matrix with n rows and x columns Z a matrix with n rows and m columns K a matrix with m rows and m columns tol tolerance for convergence maxIter maximum number of iteration
[Package AlphaSimR version 1.3.2 Index] | 2022-11-29 14:02:19 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.24586991965770721, "perplexity": 5314.906214416265}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-49/segments/1669446710698.62/warc/CC-MAIN-20221129132340-20221129162340-00203.warc.gz"} | 133 |
https://brilliant.org/problems/photoelectric-effect-2/ | # Photoelectric effect 2
Chemistry Level 2
A light with wavelength $400.0$ nm strikes the surface of cesium, and the maximum kinetic energy of the electrons ejected is $1.54 × 10^{-19}$ J. Calculate the longest wavelength of light that is capable of ejecting electrons from that metal.
× | 2021-04-11 12:57:52 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 6, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.7342957258224487, "perplexity": 909.675367436604}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-17/segments/1618038062492.5/warc/CC-MAIN-20210411115126-20210411145126-00402.warc.gz"} | 70 |
https://www.trustudies.com/question/1740/9-a-grandfather-is-ten-times-older-th/ | 3 Tutor System
Starting just at 265/hour
# 9. A grandfather is ten times older than his granddaughter. He is also 54 years older than her. Find their present ages.
Let the present age of granddaughter be x years.
and the present age of grandfather = 10x years.
As per the conditions, we have
10x – x = 54
$$\Rightarrow$$ 9x = 54
$$\Rightarrow$$ x = 54 ÷ 9 = 6 [Transposing 9 to RHS]
Hence,we have
the present age of the granddaughter = 6 years
and the present age of grandfather = 6 × 10 = 60 years. | 2023-03-24 05:52:15 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.42103639245033264, "perplexity": 2828.745781061108}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2023-14/segments/1679296945248.28/warc/CC-MAIN-20230324051147-20230324081147-00598.warc.gz"} | 147 |
http://mathhelpforum.com/discrete-math/62791-half-way-between-2-1-2-11-a-print.html | # The # half-way between 2.1 and 2.11
Printable View
• December 2nd 2008, 12:03 AM
pleasehelpme12345
The # half-way between 2.1 and 2.11
I put 2.6 but I KNOW that is wrong. I do not understand this at all, will someone please fill me in??
Many thanks!!!(Hi)
• December 2nd 2008, 12:09 AM
Chop Suey
$\frac{2.1+2.11}{2}=2.105$ | 2015-01-31 06:11:27 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 1, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.48594918847084045, "perplexity": 3853.238758847546}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 20, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": false}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2015-06/segments/1422115869320.77/warc/CC-MAIN-20150124161109-00238-ip-10-180-212-252.ec2.internal.warc.gz"} | 127 |
https://www.gradesaver.com/textbooks/math/algebra/algebra-1/chapter-12-data-analysis-and-probability-12-3-measures-of-central-tendency-and-dispersion-mixed-review-page-732/44 | ## Algebra 1
$85, 82, 83, 84, 80, 82, 86, 85, 83, 84, 81, 82$ $80, 81, 82, 82, 82, 83, 83, 84, 84, 85, 85, 86$ With 12 points, we can have 4 intervals (80-82, 82-84, 84-86, 86-88). | 2021-04-20 03:34:10 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8795006275177002, "perplexity": 1896.745997335555}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 20, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-17/segments/1618039375537.73/warc/CC-MAIN-20210420025739-20210420055739-00476.warc.gz"} | 108 |
https://brilliant.org/problems/do-i-know-a-number-other-than-4/ | # Do I Know a Number Other Than 4?
When $$(4444)^{4444}$$ is written in decimal notation, the sum of its digits is $$A$$. Let $$B$$ be the sum of the digits of $$A$$. Find the sum of the digits of $$B$$.
× | 2017-07-26 02:41:56 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 1, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.8240388035774231, "perplexity": 60.87814390493664}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2017-30/segments/1500549425751.38/warc/CC-MAIN-20170726022311-20170726042311-00311.warc.gz"} | 65 |
https://brilliant.org/problems/usual-stuff/ | # Usual Stuff
Algebra Level 4
If $a$ and $b$ are roots to the equation $x^2+x+1=0$, then which of the following options is true?
× | 2019-10-18 07:36:09 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 9, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9888688325881958, "perplexity": 385.3139531101001}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-43/segments/1570986677964.40/warc/CC-MAIN-20191018055014-20191018082514-00415.warc.gz"} | 44 |
https://wesolveproblems.org.uk/100686/ | 100686 – We Solve Problems
#### Covers , Dissections, partitions, covers and tilings
Can you cover a $10 \times 10$ square with $1 \times 4$ rectangles?
My Problem Set reset
No Problems selected | 2022-01-27 01:36:42 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.5490855574607849, "perplexity": 13756.404699681816}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-05/segments/1642320305052.56/warc/CC-MAIN-20220127012750-20220127042750-00294.warc.gz"} | 50 |
https://www.gradesaver.com/textbooks/math/other-math/CLONE-547b8018-14a8-4d02-afd6-6bc35a0864ed/chapters-1-6-cumulative-review-exercises-page-472/12 | ## Basic College Mathematics (10th Edition)
$362.74$
We have $362.735$ rounding to the nearest cent we have $362.74$. | 2022-07-01 14:43:02 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.7999875545501709, "perplexity": 2258.863262155003}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2022-27/segments/1656103941562.52/warc/CC-MAIN-20220701125452-20220701155452-00436.warc.gz"} | 33 |
https://www.gradesaver.com/textbooks/math/geometry/geometry-common-core-15th-edition/chapter-1-tools-of-geometry-1-7-midpoint-and-distance-in-the-coordinate-plane-lesson-check-page-53/1 | Geometry: Common Core (15th Edition)
$(0.5,5.5)$
Find the midpoint of the x-coordinate. Use the midpoint formula: $M=\frac{x_1+x_2}{2}=\frac{2+(-1)}{2}=\frac{1}{2}=0.5$ Find the midpoint of the y-coordinate. Use the midpoint formula: $M=\frac{y_1+y_2}{2}=\frac{(4+7)}{2}=\frac{11}{2}=5.5$ | 2018-09-23 12:38:01 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.6613054871559143, "perplexity": 1786.2657967704654}, "config": {"markdown_headings": false, "markdown_code": false, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-39/segments/1537267159359.58/warc/CC-MAIN-20180923114712-20180923135112-00422.warc.gz"} | 115 |
https://homework.cpm.org/category/CC/textbook/ccg/chapter/2/lesson/2.2.4/problem/2-94 | ### Home > CCG > Chapter 2 > Lesson 2.2.4 > Problem2-94
2-94.
Find the area of each figure below. Show all work. Remember to include units in your answer. Homework Help ✎
Look at the Math Notes box in Lesson 2.2.4 for help on how to find the areas of different shapes.
1. a square:
$49$ square cm
2. $\frac{1}{2}(b_{1}+b{_{2}})h$
$\frac{1}{2}(16+8)6\text{ feet}^2$ | 2019-10-13 23:02:21 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 3, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.6895663738250732, "perplexity": 3215.6106697258065}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2019-43/segments/1570986648343.8/warc/CC-MAIN-20191013221144-20191014004144-00021.warc.gz"} | 131 |
https://archive.lib.msu.edu/crcmath/math/math/e/e218.htm | ## Equinumerous
Let and be two classes of Positive integers. Let be the number of integers in which are less than or equal to , and let be the number of integers in which are less than or equal to . Then if
and are said to be equinumerous.
The four classes of Primes , , , are equinumerous. Similarly, since and are both of the form , and and are both of the form , and are also equinumerous. | 2021-12-03 19:23:58 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": false, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.9509849548339844, "perplexity": 222.90843261799725}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-49/segments/1637964362918.89/warc/CC-MAIN-20211203182358-20211203212358-00225.warc.gz"} | 100 |
http://clay6.com/qa/30891/which-of-the-following-is-the-correct-order-of-dipolement-value- | Browse Questions
# Which of the following is the correct order of dipolement value?
Can you answer this question?
The correct order of dipolemoment value is
Hence (a) is the correct order.
answered Mar 10, 2014 | 2017-05-24 21:27:08 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 1, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 0, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.785815417766571, "perplexity": 4031.1652632545424}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.3, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2017-22/segments/1495463607862.71/warc/CC-MAIN-20170524211702-20170524231702-00353.warc.gz"} | 52 |
https://pennylane.readthedocs.io/en/latest/code/api/pennylane.operation.Variance.html | # qml.operation.Variance¶
Variance = var
An enumeration which represents returning the variance of an observable on specified wires.
Type
Enum | 2021-09-27 17:00:23 | {"extraction_info": {"found_math": true, "script_math_tex": 0, "script_math_asciimath": 0, "math_annotations": 0, "math_alttext": 0, "mathml": 0, "mathjax_tag": 0, "mathjax_inline_tex": 0, "mathjax_display_tex": 0, "mathjax_asciimath": 1, "img_math": 0, "codecogs_latex": 0, "wp_latex": 0, "mimetex.cgi": 0, "/images/math/codecogs": 0, "mathtex.cgi": 0, "katex": 0, "math-container": 0, "wp-katex-eq": 0, "align": 0, "equation": 0, "x-ck12": 0, "texerror": 0, "math_score": 0.23619462549686432, "perplexity": 12359.298140414347}, "config": {"markdown_headings": true, "markdown_code": true, "boilerplate_config": {"ratio_threshold": 0.18, "absolute_threshold": 10, "end_threshold": 15, "enable": true}, "remove_buttons": true, "remove_image_figures": true, "remove_link_clusters": true, "table_config": {"min_rows": 2, "min_cols": 3, "format": "plain"}, "remove_chinese": true, "remove_edit_buttons": true, "extract_latex": true}, "warc_path": "s3://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2021-39/segments/1631780058456.86/warc/CC-MAIN-20210927151238-20210927181238-00257.warc.gz"} | 30 |