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  3. Would Maths 'Work' in a Different Base?

Would Maths 'Work' in a Different Base?

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  • B Offline
    B Offline
    Ben Breeg
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    So there I was, wallowing in the bath when it suddenly occurs to me 'would maths work the same if we used a different base.' What I mean is, lets say instead of the 10 fingers that we have and on which our decimal counting system is based we had say 14 fingers so we would be counting in base 14 as the norm. Would things like Pythagoras theorem, the Fibonacci sequence, Pi, prime numbers, calculus, square roots, sins, cosines and tangents work? Not being a mathematician, I can't get my head round whether these would work or not. Intuition tells me it would. Would this work in base 14? http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2911945.stm[^] Does Riemann's hypothesis work in any base? What do the great and good think?

    I am the Breeg, goo goo g'joob Aici zace un om despre care nu sestie prea mult

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    • B Ben Breeg

      So there I was, wallowing in the bath when it suddenly occurs to me 'would maths work the same if we used a different base.' What I mean is, lets say instead of the 10 fingers that we have and on which our decimal counting system is based we had say 14 fingers so we would be counting in base 14 as the norm. Would things like Pythagoras theorem, the Fibonacci sequence, Pi, prime numbers, calculus, square roots, sins, cosines and tangents work? Not being a mathematician, I can't get my head round whether these would work or not. Intuition tells me it would. Would this work in base 14? http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2911945.stm[^] Does Riemann's hypothesis work in any base? What do the great and good think?

      I am the Breeg, goo goo g'joob Aici zace un om despre care nu sestie prea mult

      G Offline
      G Offline
      gavindon
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      I think that if it didn't, a mathematician would figure out how to make it work :-D An engineer, a physicist, and a mathematician are shown a pasture with a herd of sheep, and told to put them inside the smallest possible amount of fence. The engineer is first. He herds the sheep into a circle and then puts the fence around them, declaring, "A circle will use the least fence for a given area, so this is the best solution." The physicist is next. She creates a circular fence of infinite radius around the sheep, and then draws the fence tight around the herd, declaring, "This will give the smallest circular fence around the herd." The mathematician is last. After giving the problem a little thought, he puts a small fence around himself and then declares, "I define myself to be on the outside!" A mathematician and a physicist were asked the following question: Suppose you walked by a burning house and saw a hydrant and a hose not connected to the hydrant. What would you do? P: I would attach the hose to the hydrant, turn on the water, and put out the fire. M: I would attach the hose to the hydrant, turn on the water, and put out the fire. Then they were asked this question: Suppose you walked by a house and saw a hose connected to a hydrant. What would you do? P: I would keep walking, as there is no problem to solve. M: I would disconnect the hose from the hydrant and set the house on fire, reducing the problem to a previously solved form.

      Programming is a race between programmers trying to build bigger and better idiot proof programs, and the universe trying to build bigger and better idiots, so far... the universe is winning.

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      • B Ben Breeg

        So there I was, wallowing in the bath when it suddenly occurs to me 'would maths work the same if we used a different base.' What I mean is, lets say instead of the 10 fingers that we have and on which our decimal counting system is based we had say 14 fingers so we would be counting in base 14 as the norm. Would things like Pythagoras theorem, the Fibonacci sequence, Pi, prime numbers, calculus, square roots, sins, cosines and tangents work? Not being a mathematician, I can't get my head round whether these would work or not. Intuition tells me it would. Would this work in base 14? http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2911945.stm[^] Does Riemann's hypothesis work in any base? What do the great and good think?

        I am the Breeg, goo goo g'joob Aici zace un om despre care nu sestie prea mult

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        Dalek Dave
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        Yes.

        ------------------------------------ I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave CCC Link[^] Trolls[^]

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        • B Ben Breeg

          So there I was, wallowing in the bath when it suddenly occurs to me 'would maths work the same if we used a different base.' What I mean is, lets say instead of the 10 fingers that we have and on which our decimal counting system is based we had say 14 fingers so we would be counting in base 14 as the norm. Would things like Pythagoras theorem, the Fibonacci sequence, Pi, prime numbers, calculus, square roots, sins, cosines and tangents work? Not being a mathematician, I can't get my head round whether these would work or not. Intuition tells me it would. Would this work in base 14? http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2911945.stm[^] Does Riemann's hypothesis work in any base? What do the great and good think?

          I am the Breeg, goo goo g'joob Aici zace un om despre care nu sestie prea mult

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          Slacker007
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          Benjamin Breeg wrote:

          wallowing in the bath

          You need to take more showers. :)

          -- ** You don't hire a handyman to build a house, you hire a carpenter. ** Jack of all trades and master of none.

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          • B Ben Breeg

            So there I was, wallowing in the bath when it suddenly occurs to me 'would maths work the same if we used a different base.' What I mean is, lets say instead of the 10 fingers that we have and on which our decimal counting system is based we had say 14 fingers so we would be counting in base 14 as the norm. Would things like Pythagoras theorem, the Fibonacci sequence, Pi, prime numbers, calculus, square roots, sins, cosines and tangents work? Not being a mathematician, I can't get my head round whether these would work or not. Intuition tells me it would. Would this work in base 14? http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2911945.stm[^] Does Riemann's hypothesis work in any base? What do the great and good think?

            I am the Breeg, goo goo g'joob Aici zace un om despre care nu sestie prea mult

            A Offline
            A Offline
            AspDotNetDev
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            14 in base-10 is the same as E in base-14 (though perhaps then we'd call it base-E). The relations are all the same, the numbers would just be presented differently. Consider, for example, that the approximate value of pie is just as easy to represent on your computer in binary (base-2) as it is on paper using base-10. Dividing by 2 in any number system is just cutting in half.

            [Managing Your JavaScript Library in ASP.NET]

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            • B Ben Breeg

              So there I was, wallowing in the bath when it suddenly occurs to me 'would maths work the same if we used a different base.' What I mean is, lets say instead of the 10 fingers that we have and on which our decimal counting system is based we had say 14 fingers so we would be counting in base 14 as the norm. Would things like Pythagoras theorem, the Fibonacci sequence, Pi, prime numbers, calculus, square roots, sins, cosines and tangents work? Not being a mathematician, I can't get my head round whether these would work or not. Intuition tells me it would. Would this work in base 14? http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2911945.stm[^] Does Riemann's hypothesis work in any base? What do the great and good think?

              I am the Breeg, goo goo g'joob Aici zace un om despre care nu sestie prea mult

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              L Offline
              Luc Pattyn
              wrote on last edited by
              #6

              Benjamin Breeg wrote:

              Not being a mathematician, I can't get my head round ...

              You don't have to be a mathematician to understand that a number is an abstract quantity, and does not need digits to exist and have a meaning. It is just most humans seem to need digits to visualize numbers, and most of them do that in decimal. BTW: do you really think you can prove your computer performs its calculations in binary arithmetic? :)

              Luc Pattyn [My Articles] Nil Volentibus Arduum

              The quality and detail of your question reflects on the effectiveness of the help you are likely to get.
              Please use <PRE> tags for code snippets, they improve readability.
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              • L Luc Pattyn

                Benjamin Breeg wrote:

                Not being a mathematician, I can't get my head round ...

                You don't have to be a mathematician to understand that a number is an abstract quantity, and does not need digits to exist and have a meaning. It is just most humans seem to need digits to visualize numbers, and most of them do that in decimal. BTW: do you really think you can prove your computer performs its calculations in binary arithmetic? :)

                Luc Pattyn [My Articles] Nil Volentibus Arduum

                The quality and detail of your question reflects on the effectiveness of the help you are likely to get.
                Please use <PRE> tags for code snippets, they improve readability.
                CP Vanity has been updated to V2.3

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                AspDotNetDev
                wrote on last edited by
                #7

                Luc Pattyn wrote:

                do you really think you can prove your computer performs its calculations in binary arithmetic?

                You think that's air you're breathing?

                [Managing Your JavaScript Library in ASP.NET]

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                • B Ben Breeg

                  So there I was, wallowing in the bath when it suddenly occurs to me 'would maths work the same if we used a different base.' What I mean is, lets say instead of the 10 fingers that we have and on which our decimal counting system is based we had say 14 fingers so we would be counting in base 14 as the norm. Would things like Pythagoras theorem, the Fibonacci sequence, Pi, prime numbers, calculus, square roots, sins, cosines and tangents work? Not being a mathematician, I can't get my head round whether these would work or not. Intuition tells me it would. Would this work in base 14? http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2911945.stm[^] Does Riemann's hypothesis work in any base? What do the great and good think?

                  I am the Breeg, goo goo g'joob Aici zace un om despre care nu sestie prea mult

                  B Offline
                  B Offline
                  Bassam Abdul Baki
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #8

                  For the most part, yes. There are some things that work in some bases, but not in others, even in some complex bases. A hexadecimal representation of pi was discovered a while back, but no decimal representation is possible (I think).

                  Web - BM - RSS - Math - LinkedIn

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                  • B Ben Breeg

                    So there I was, wallowing in the bath when it suddenly occurs to me 'would maths work the same if we used a different base.' What I mean is, lets say instead of the 10 fingers that we have and on which our decimal counting system is based we had say 14 fingers so we would be counting in base 14 as the norm. Would things like Pythagoras theorem, the Fibonacci sequence, Pi, prime numbers, calculus, square roots, sins, cosines and tangents work? Not being a mathematician, I can't get my head round whether these would work or not. Intuition tells me it would. Would this work in base 14? http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2911945.stm[^] Does Riemann's hypothesis work in any base? What do the great and good think?

                    I am the Breeg, goo goo g'joob Aici zace un om despre care nu sestie prea mult

                    G Offline
                    G Offline
                    Gregory Gadow
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #9

                    Yes and no. With sequences of whole numbers, base does not matter. However, some properties of a sequence, such as the "shallow diagonal" property of the Fibonacci sequence, take on different characteristics in different bases. Geometric values, such as pi, phi and e, will be eqivalent regardless of base: given any circle, the ratio of its circumference and its diameter will equal pi regardless of what base you are using. The most notable problem when using different bases is the representation of a fractional part. For example, the ratio of 1/10 in base-10 evaluates to a rational number, 0.1. The eqivalent in base-2, 1/1010, evaluates to an irrational number, 0.000110011.... There is a whole branch of mathematics that looks at translation between bases, although I cannot remember what that field is.

                    B S 2 Replies Last reply
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                    • G Gregory Gadow

                      Yes and no. With sequences of whole numbers, base does not matter. However, some properties of a sequence, such as the "shallow diagonal" property of the Fibonacci sequence, take on different characteristics in different bases. Geometric values, such as pi, phi and e, will be eqivalent regardless of base: given any circle, the ratio of its circumference and its diameter will equal pi regardless of what base you are using. The most notable problem when using different bases is the representation of a fractional part. For example, the ratio of 1/10 in base-10 evaluates to a rational number, 0.1. The eqivalent in base-2, 1/1010, evaluates to an irrational number, 0.000110011.... There is a whole branch of mathematics that looks at translation between bases, although I cannot remember what that field is.

                      B Offline
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                      Bassam Abdul Baki
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #10

                      No idea, but p-adic[^] numbers are cool.

                      Web - BM - RSS - Math - LinkedIn

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                      • B Bassam Abdul Baki

                        For the most part, yes. There are some things that work in some bases, but not in others, even in some complex bases. A hexadecimal representation of pi was discovered a while back, but no decimal representation is possible (I think).

                        Web - BM - RSS - Math - LinkedIn

                        A Offline
                        A Offline
                        AspDotNetDev
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #11

                        Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote:

                        A hexadecimal representation of pi was discovered a while back, but no decimal representation is possible

                        Huh? Then what is 3.14159...

                        [Managing Your JavaScript Library in ASP.NET]

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                        • A AspDotNetDev

                          14 in base-10 is the same as E in base-14 (though perhaps then we'd call it base-E). The relations are all the same, the numbers would just be presented differently. Consider, for example, that the approximate value of pie is just as easy to represent on your computer in binary (base-2) as it is on paper using base-10. Dividing by 2 in any number system is just cutting in half.

                          [Managing Your JavaScript Library in ASP.NET]

                          L Offline
                          L Offline
                          Lost User
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #12

                          AspDotNetDev wrote:

                          Dividing by 2 in any number system is just cutting in half.

                          In Binary, it's cutting 10 in 0.1

                          MVVM# - See how I did MVVM my way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')

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                          • A AspDotNetDev

                            Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote:

                            A hexadecimal representation of pi was discovered a while back, but no decimal representation is possible

                            Huh? Then what is 3.14159...

                            [Managing Your JavaScript Library in ASP.NET]

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                            B Offline
                            Bassam Abdul Baki
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #13

                            An approximation. In decimal, a few billion digits have been calculated. In hexadecimal, a representation was found.

                            A 2 Replies Last reply
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                            • B Bassam Abdul Baki

                              An approximation. In decimal, a few billion digits have been calculated. In hexadecimal, a representation was found.

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                              A Offline
                              AspDotNetDev
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #14

                              Link or it didn't happen!

                              [Managing Your JavaScript Library in ASP.NET]

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                              • A AspDotNetDev

                                Link or it didn't happen!

                                [Managing Your JavaScript Library in ASP.NET]

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                                Albert Holguin
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #15

                                You have to wait until he makes a Wikipedia page for it... may take a second or two... :laugh:

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                                • A Albert Holguin

                                  You have to wait until he makes a Wikipedia page for it... may take a second or two... :laugh:

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                                  AspDotNetDev
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #16

                                  If he really wants to make it convincing, he should ask for help from a pro, such as DD.

                                  [Managing Your JavaScript Library in ASP.NET]

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                                  • B Bassam Abdul Baki

                                    For the most part, yes. There are some things that work in some bases, but not in others, even in some complex bases. A hexadecimal representation of pi was discovered a while back, but no decimal representation is possible (I think).

                                    Web - BM - RSS - Math - LinkedIn

                                    L Offline
                                    L Offline
                                    Luc Pattyn
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #17

                                    You probably mean 16/7. It is too bad there is no Nobel prize for Maths. :((

                                    Luc Pattyn [My Articles] Nil Volentibus Arduum

                                    The quality and detail of your question reflects on the effectiveness of the help you are likely to get.
                                    Please use <PRE> tags for code snippets, they improve readability.
                                    CP Vanity has been updated to V2.3

                                    A B 2 Replies Last reply
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                                    • B Bassam Abdul Baki

                                      An approximation. In decimal, a few billion digits have been calculated. In hexadecimal, a representation was found.

                                      A Offline
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                                      AspDotNetDev
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #18

                                      If you are talking about this, it just allows you to calculate the n-th digit of pi in a variety of number bases, but the number of digits is still infinite. Well, unless your number system is in increments of pi (0π, 1π, 2π...). :rolleyes:

                                      [Managing Your JavaScript Library in ASP.NET]

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                                      • B Ben Breeg

                                        So there I was, wallowing in the bath when it suddenly occurs to me 'would maths work the same if we used a different base.' What I mean is, lets say instead of the 10 fingers that we have and on which our decimal counting system is based we had say 14 fingers so we would be counting in base 14 as the norm. Would things like Pythagoras theorem, the Fibonacci sequence, Pi, prime numbers, calculus, square roots, sins, cosines and tangents work? Not being a mathematician, I can't get my head round whether these would work or not. Intuition tells me it would. Would this work in base 14? http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2911945.stm[^] Does Riemann's hypothesis work in any base? What do the great and good think?

                                        I am the Breeg, goo goo g'joob Aici zace un om despre care nu sestie prea mult

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                                        Amar Chaudhary
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #19

                                        It would have evolved that way - they didn't have borrowed characters form alphabets. And its not about conversion from based 10 to base x, everything would have been developed according to base x, so there is a probability that they would have figured out something similar but can't be said exactly....

                                        My Startup!!!!
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                                        • G Gregory Gadow

                                          Yes and no. With sequences of whole numbers, base does not matter. However, some properties of a sequence, such as the "shallow diagonal" property of the Fibonacci sequence, take on different characteristics in different bases. Geometric values, such as pi, phi and e, will be eqivalent regardless of base: given any circle, the ratio of its circumference and its diameter will equal pi regardless of what base you are using. The most notable problem when using different bases is the representation of a fractional part. For example, the ratio of 1/10 in base-10 evaluates to a rational number, 0.1. The eqivalent in base-2, 1/1010, evaluates to an irrational number, 0.000110011.... There is a whole branch of mathematics that looks at translation between bases, although I cannot remember what that field is.

                                          S Offline
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                                          Sean Cundiff
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #20

                                          Gregory.Gadow wrote:

                                          The most notable problem when using different bases is the representation of a fractional part. For example, the ratio of 1/10 in base-10 evaluates to a rational number, 0.1. The eqivalent in base-2, 1/1010, evaluates to an irrational number, 0.000110011....

                                          Actually, the base of a number has nothing to do with whether it's rational or irrational. Your example of 1/10 in base-2 is still rational as a rational number is a number that can be represented by: P/Q Where P and Q are integers. In base-10 your example is 1/10. In base-2 your example is 1/1010. Both are the ratio of two integers and thus are rational. Don't confuse a decimal fraction that is infinitely long as irrational. 1/3 is a rational number yet its decimal representation is 0.3333333... If the decimal fraction is finite length the number is rational. If the decimal fraction is infinite length but repeating the number is rational. If the decimal fraction is infinite length and non-repeating the number is irrational.

                                          -Sean ---- Fire Nuts

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