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Re: Matheology § 203
Posted:
Feb 1, 2013 12:14 PM
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On 1 Feb., 17:29, William Hughes <wpihug...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Feb 1, 4:34 pm, WM <mueck...@rz.fh-augsburg.de> wrote: > > > I just gave an example. Do you agree? > > But you did not answer the question > The example is discussed in another subthread. > I have slightly modified the question
Sorry, if you don't tell me whether I am on the right track, I cannot be sure to correctly answer your question. > > Accoding to WM > > A potentially infinite list, L, > of potentially infinite 0/1 sequences > can have the property that every > (in the sense of "all from 1 to n") > potentially infinite 0/1 sequence > is a line of L
That is obvious. The list *has* the property that all its lines are all its lines
> > Let a potentially infinite list, L, > of potentially infinite 0/1 sequences > have the property that every > (in the sense of "all from 1 to n") > potentially infinite 0/1 sequence > is a line of L
Every line (from 1 to n) of L is a line of L. I cannot see why you ask. > > Let s be a potentially infinite > 0/1 sequence. > > Does this imply that s is > a line of L
Of course not. s may be another line than those contained in L.
Regards, WM
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