In 1876, James Abram Garfield (1831–1881), who served as the twentieth President of the United States, published a new proof of the Pythagorean theorem in the New England Journal of Education.
@Ipukakaren@MathGuyTFL You have to be careful when using excel to do this kind of test, as excel is not the most precise program ever. Try this instead, https://t.co/gQIpeJCwje. You will notice that as n gets larger, it converges to ~0.049
@Ipukakaren@MathGuyTFL Also, by definition any positive number smaller than one tends to zero when raised to the n and n grows larger. So which definition do we use? The one that leads to 1 or the one that leads to 0?
@rdnzus@Riazi_Cafe_en Yes, but when calculating the permutations of 51 elements you are definitely considering some with the aces coming before the ace-king tandem. I don't know
@rdnzus@Riazi_Cafe_en Aren't you accounting also for the permutations where another ace appears before the ace-king tandem? Still I know your answer is correct, but I'm not sure why!
@AntologiadelSer@Cuauhtemoc_1521 Lo de quitar tres ceros a la moneda fue para facilitar operaciones. No tuvo un impacto negativo en la economía de los mexicanos... genio