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Arithmetic
Arithmetic

... • Suppose n is even, n = 2m • To compute a∙b • Write a = a1∙2m + a0, b = b1∙2m + b0, where a1, a0, b1, b0 are m-bit numbers (numbers < 2m) – the first and last m bits of a and b a∙b = a1b1∙22m + (a1b0+a0b1)∙2m + a0b0 = a1b1∙(22m+2m) + (a1-a0)(b0-b1)∙2m + a0b0∙(2m+1) Only 3 m-bit multiplications!!! ...
Math 4707 The Catalan Nunbers 1 Introduction
Math 4707 The Catalan Nunbers 1 Introduction

... the railroad tracks, and then subtract from the total number of blockwalks. Let B be a blockwalk which crosses the railroad track, and let Bi denote the letter (N or E) in the ith step of the walk. Any blockwalk which crosses the tracks must, at some point, have the number of E’s exceed the number o ...
Polygons
Polygons

The Department of Mathematics, Newsletter to Schools, 2015/16, No.2
The Department of Mathematics, Newsletter to Schools, 2015/16, No.2

In order for a figure to be considered a polygon, it must
In order for a figure to be considered a polygon, it must

COS 423 Lecture 1 Counting in Binary Amortized and Worst-Case Efficiency
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... k. Let Φ = n mod 2k. Each add increases Φ by one, unless cost is k + 1 or more. (We call the add expensive.) In this case n mod 2k = 2k – 1, so Φ decreases by 2k – 1. This can happen at most n/2k times out of n: Φ = n - e2k ≥ 0, where e = #expensive adds. ...
WARM-UPS - Institut Pere Fontdevila
WARM-UPS - Institut Pere Fontdevila

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Logarithm
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... For decimal numbers with fractional part (小數部), we separate the fractional part from its integral part (整數部). Like 7.687510, the integral part is 7, and the fractional part is 0.6875. Convert the integral part into binary directly (1112), and do the fractional part as follows: ...
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Area and Perimeter of Regular Polygons

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Integer Exponent Review Notes

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Exam - Lenoir-Rhyne University

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Geometry
Geometry

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Significant Figures and Scientific Notation

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Geometry 10-1 Circles and Circumference

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Topic 2 TEKS Cumulative Practice

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Geometry 10-1 Circles and Circumference A. Parts of Circles 1. A

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A Quick Change of Base Algorithm for Fractions

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A Discussion on Aryabhata`s Root extraction

ENGLISH / MATH GRADE 6
ENGLISH / MATH GRADE 6

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Approximations of π



Approximations for the mathematical constant pi (π) in the history of mathematics reached an accuracy within 0.04% of the true value before the beginning of the Common Era (Archimedes). In Chinese mathematics, this was improved to approximations correct to what corresponds to about seven decimal digits by the 5th century.Further progress was made only from the 15th century (Jamshīd al-Kāshī), and early modern mathematicians reached an accuracy of 35 digits by the 18th century (Ludolph van Ceulen), and 126 digits by the 19th century (Jurij Vega), surpassing the accuracy required for any conceivable application outside of pure mathematics.The record of manual approximation of π is held by William Shanks, who calculated 527 digits correctly in the years preceding 1873. Since the mid 20th century, approximation of π has been the task of electronic digital computers; the current record (as of May 2015) is at 13.3 trillion digits, calculated in October 2014.
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