I just learned about another link between math and programming too:
In my C++ class back in '07, when talking about cin and cout, my professor mentioned something called a source and a sink. Oddly enough, in my vector calculus class, when we talked about vector fields, the terms source and sink were also used. There really is a strong connection between the two fields, probably more than you even realize.
Kinda off topic but it is so weird to me how yanks call it math. When did you guys drop the plural? Its called Mathematics after all it would sound absurd to call it Mathematic. I suppose its a bit like an conversion from a double to an int you just lose all decimal points.
dejai wrote:Kinda off topic but it is so weird to me how yanks call it math. When did you guys drop the plural? Its called Mathematics after all it would sound absurd to call it Mathematic. I suppose its a bit like an conversion from a double to an int you just lose all decimal points.
The novice realizes that the difference between code and data is trivial. The expert realizes that all code is data. And the true master realizes that all data is code.
dejai wrote:Kinda off topic but it is so weird to me how yanks call it math. When did you guys drop the plural? Its called Mathematics after all it would sound absurd to call it Mathematic. I suppose its a bit like an conversion from a double to an int you just lose all decimal points.
Correct, it is a truncation. But when you truncate, you take off everything at the end, not all but one, right?
Except that truncation of a noun is a noun, and truncation of an adjective is an adjective. And since math is a truncation of mathematics, not a truncation of mathematical (mathematic seems to only be a word according to some), it's a noun.
I realized the moment I fell into the fissure that the book would not be destroyed as I had planned.