User talk:Brirush
Some Wikipedia conventions
[edit]Hello. Please notice my recent edits to the article titled Finite subdivision rule. In particular, the article began thus:
- A finite subdivision rule is a recursive way of refining a cell complex.
That fails to tell the lay reader that mathematics is what it's about. I revised it to say
- In mathematics, a finite subdivision rule is a recursive way of refining a cell complex.
In some cases, that's not necessary. For example, in the article titled Group (mathematics), the title itself accomplishes that purpose, and the same is true of something titled Associative algebra. One might also say "In geometry,..." or "In number theory,...", etc., but not "In category theory,..." since non-mathematicians would not usually understand that that is mathematics.
Also:
- I made the article title singular. WP:MOS says the title should be singular except when there is a special reason for it to be plural.
- The title of the initial section was the same as the article's title. I deleted the section heading for the initial section. That is customary. At any rate, that heading was redundant.
- WP:MOS also says one shouldn't capitalize an initial letter merely because it's in a section heading. The first letter of the heading is capitalized, and of course so are the initial letters of proper names and the like.
I also added a few links. Michael Hardy (talk) 22:11, 27 August 2012 (UTC)
Research webpage
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A reference problem
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Here you added a new reference Elstrodt & Singh but didn't define it. This has been showing as an error at the bottom of the article. Cite error: The named reference was invoked but never defined. Can you take a look and work out what you were trying to do? Thanks -- Frze > talk 03:13, 23 October 2013 (UTC)
- @Frze::
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Hello! I recently noticed your contributions at Ring theory. I liked some of the modifications, but there was a large chunk of content I removed. Let me explain.
I don't know if you were aware, but in the past year there was a lot of discussion about reconciling the roles of some of the "ring" articles, and the upshot was that ring theory would talk about the theory as a whole, whereas ring (mathematics) would talk about detailed information and examples of rings.
I think if you check out the latter article, you'll see that most of what you wrote about examples of rings and ideals is already there, so it shouldn't be duplicated to that extent elsewhere. I and other editors of these articles look forward to whatever ideas you might have about them. And knowing that there are these other articles might reduce the "expansion" task you hinted at in your edit summary :) Anyhow, I'll watch your talkpage for responses in the near future, and you're always welcome to contact me on my own talkpage. Regards Rschwieb (talk) 13:54, 25 October 2013 (UTC)
Thank you for your response! I see that ring (mathematics) does contain all of the material that I added. I've been trying to move all `start class' top importance articles up to at least a C. C articles are described as:
Useful to many readers. A reader would feel they generally understood the basics the topic, but there are noticeable gaps in the material presented. There may be questionable or irrelevant material or the material may not be organized in a way that makes the subject easy to understand. Will be of little or no use to a serious student or researcher.
I feel that ring theory is already at that level, if not higher. I felt that the only thing missing was a description of more of the objects used in ring theory, but I see now that that belongs to another article. I will continue on to other 'start class' articles, however, I was considering adding some image (like the formula for the distributive law, of Hamilton's famous quaternions cycle, or a diagram of a scheme, or a page from a book, or a picture of a famous ring theorist such as Emmy Noether). Brirush (talk) 14:25, 25 October 2013 (UTC)
- Aha, well I'm glad to see this effort :) A picture would be pretty cool. I don't think any ring theorists would recommend a picture of a person, but yeah, one of the quaternion picture or else the page picture from Hilbert's book at ring (mathematics) might be good candidates. Good luck in your work! Rschwieb (talk) 18:06, 25 October 2013 (UTC)
Commutative algebra
[edit]You have added a section "Main tools and results" to commutative algebra. Such a section could improve the article dramatically, but not with the content you have added. In fact, except for Lasker-Noether theorem, none of the subsections are specific to the field. On the other hand the main tools that make commutative algebra a field that is different of non-commutative ring theory are not even cited. These tools include localization (including the field of fractions of an integral domain), completion, Zariski topology on prime ideals.
I could have reverted your edits, but is seems more constructive to let you correct them by yourselves.
D.Lazard (talk) 13:23, 29 October 2013 (UTC)
Thank you, it's good to have a direction to move in. I'll work on that, unless you beat me to it. I felt uneasy after my edits, but didn't know how to correct it. Brirush (talk) 13:56, 29 October 2013 (UTC)
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Talkback
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Double sharp (talk) 14:24, 2 November 2013 (UTC)
Thanks!
[edit]Hi,
Thanks for your work on product (mathematics) (and, I now see, plenty of other pages as well. BTW, you might enjoy socializing at WP:WPM. User:Linas (talk) 18:08, 2 November 2013 (UTC)
- Thank you! I was borrowing layout and equations from the German version; I know I left a lot for people to fill in, but I figured it would help people if there were a framework. I have been trying to get all 'start class' 'top importance' articles from mathematics to C class. Brirush (talk) 19:26, 2 November 2013 (UTC)
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- X</math> to be the origin. A '''geodesic ray''' is a path given by an [[isometry]] <math>\gamma:[0,\infty)\rightarrow X</math> such that each segment <math>\gamma([0,t])</math> is a path of shortest length
- Given a point <math>p></math> in the Gromov boundary, we define the sets <math>V(p,r)=\{q\in \partial X|</math> there are
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Thank you for your recent edits
[edit]Medal of Honor | |
Good idea to split, the new title is: Mathematical constants and functions. Thank you. Ignacitum (talk) 16:05, 8 December 2013 (UTC) |
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- W. R. Parry. ''Lattès maps and subdivision rules''. Conformal Geometry and Dynamics, vol. 14 (2010, pp. 113–140.</ref>
- subdivision rules to refine a surface to any given level of precision. These subdivision surfaces (such as [[Catmull-Clark subdivision surface]] take a [[polygon mesh]] (the kind used in 3-d
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[edit]The article Finite subdivision rule you nominated as a good article has been placed on hold . The article is close to meeting the good article criteria, but there are some minor changes or clarifications needed to be addressed. If these are fixed within 7 days, the article will pass, otherwise it will fail. See Talk:Finite subdivision rule for things which need to be addressed. Message delivered by Legobot, on behalf of SnowFire -- SnowFire (talk) 07:52, 9 December 2013 (UTC)
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help please
[edit]hi brirush,
it seems some noobs are continually reverting my edit to Pierre de Fermat, where i retitled him as a 'mathematician' as opposed to amateur.
if you look at the edit history, i am on my second revert. i understand the third would be a violation and i want to refrain from this.
however i was wondering if you could read my comments on the edit history and chime in, as i feel an inconsistent criteria is being applied.
there are many amateur mathematicians whose profiles lists them as mathematicians. in fact, i argue that the title amateur mathematician is unnecessary, but nonetheless: if the likes of ramanujan are listed under 'amateur mathematicians', yet their profile says mathematician, why should fermat be any different?
note ramanujan is just one example. my edit comments show quite a few who have this issue. given your stature in the wikimath, and my observation of your great edits to the topology sections, i am hoping you can take hold of this situation and lead the community to some sort of _reasonable_ conclusion.
ty — Preceding unsigned comment added by 174.3.213.121 (talk) 04:18, 1 March 2015 (UTC)
Moved from user page
[edit]Hey, Brirush:
I'm confused. You say about changes to the "Normal Distribution": This is a brand new paper and seems to be someone's self-reference.
The approximation is valid and used for years. Why then is the fact that it just now put in a "brand new paper" disqualify it for use in this article?
Do you object to where it is placed? Should it be placed elsewhere? What is your real concern?
Hikenstuff (talk) 15:34, 20 March 2015 (UTC)
fyi
[edit]i'm not anti hindu. i just didn't agree with the insertion at all.
could i have voiced it in a more civil tone? probably, but the insertion of a hindu prophet was unwarranted.
i am confused as to why you felt like i was being anti hindu. while many great mathematicians were religious, none of them are considered prophets or apart of 'Series on <religion>'.
can you please share some insight as to what motivated you to say i'm anti-hindu? do you think it is appropiate that religious prophets should be listed among the 'best' mathematicians of all time?
further: i saw no other reason for the insertions other than if the individual who made them being hindu. that was my fault for speculating, however i just cannot see anyone else wanting to insert these people. i've never heard of these people prior to the insertion. on the other hand, i was exposed to the names of many mathematicians on this page (PRIOR to that edit) during my K-12 years.
as i said to dianna in a followup: i am from a country that preaches religious tolerance, so to suggest that i somehow am against that freedom is inappropriate. i am just against using religious prophets as 'prominent mathematicians'.
i am quite sure the list of mathematicians was fine as-is before that insertion. could you please provide some insight as to why you felt otherwise?
lastly: yes the other aggressive edits could have stated more politely, but i think your motivation for reporting my behaviour was more about the anti-hinduism tones. i want to be clear: i am NOT anti hindu. i am NOT anti-religion. i ENCOURAGE people exercise their rights to religious freedoms.
i just can't agree that the individual being listed 'belonged'. given that i was a beneficiary of arguably some of the best public education in the world, can you please enlighten me as to why i was incorrect? maybe you were irked by the tone of my reversions, but i vehemently stand by the fact that no prophet needs to be in the list of prominent mathematicians.
i just want to make sure we're on the same page. maybe you just didn't like my tone, but i just want to make sure we're clear and have a decent discussion about this edit.
thanks — Preceding unsigned comment added by 174.3.213.121 (talk) 23:50, 28 March 2015 (UTC)
P.S.: http://wiki.riteme.site/w/index.php?title=History_of_mathematics&diff=653914682&oldid=653780326 someone from india tried to inappropriately 'move up' the date of the history of indian mathematics to 3000 BC (from 2600 BC). proof it's an ip from india: http://www.nirsoft.net/countryip/in.html
- i will let you draw your own conclusions. but i am far from anti-hindu.
oh and al-hazen was a muslim. just wanted to state that because for some reason that edit didn't get through (I still get what you were saying about the anti-religious tones, which wasn't necessarily my intent. moreso was trying to say others with religious bias were going to skew wiki in favour of the scholars who inspired them most. nonetheless i digress)
my consultation of the cited source for the original dates of 2600 to 1900 BC found that Boyer (ed 1 p208 as the cited source) stated 2000 BC.
can i get some clarification or moderation by you as to why the history starts at 2600? 174.3.213.121 (talk) 00:22, 29 March 2015 (UTC)
we coo. thanks for the response homie 174.3.213.121 (talk) 00:33, 29 March 2015 (UTC)
Addition
[edit]I had put a placeholder note last week in your FAC nomination for addition, but then was unexpectedly busy and got distracted till I saw the archive note pop up on my watchlist this morning. Sorry! Kudos for taking on such a large topic. I think these very broad articles are more challenging to review, so if and when you take it back to FAC I think it always helps to have people who know the subject aware of the nomination and ready to provide comments.
Some general suggestions from reading through the article:
- A possible coverage gap is the absence of information about adding and teaching addition in traditional, pre-industrial societies. (I wondered if the Piraha people would come up - whose language supposedly lacks number words and who supposedly are unsuccessful in learning addition - though I don't remember if those claims turned out to hold up.) You do mention Rome but nothing about the mechanistic process of adding in Roman numerals, and I don't see anything about numeral representation in other writing systems or in societies without written language. (IIRC writing numbers for trade purposes generally precedes a full written language?)
- On the same theme, most of the discussion of education ("In primary school,..." etc.) implicitly assumes an educational system in the western tradition. It would be interesting to know if/how addition is taught in places with little formal education, and if any major educational systems have distinctive ways of teaching. Expanding that section would be a better use of space than the full addition table, where just one or two columns would suffice considering virtually all readers will be familiar with the idea.
- "positive fractions are added before negative numbers are even considered; this is also the historical route" - it would be interesting to flesh the reasons for this out a bit more; I was surprised by it. (I'm pretty sure I learned the other way around, at least.)
- The ASCII-art examples of stacked column addition (is there a name for this?) could be improved or supplemented as images. An animation illustrating "carrying" would be particularly effective in comparison to the text version.
- My understanding is that American early education has recently been emphasizing the early discovery of the pattern-based strategies you list, where previously there was emphasis on memorization. Is that true? Can you expand that section with studies of how effective this kind of education is? Currently that section is just a list of common mental-math tricks.
- Overall, I think (as a non-mathematician) that this article does a good job touching on the relevant more technical aspects without getting bogged down in explaining formal concepts that have their own, mostly well-developed articles. The history, culture, and education side of things is a little weaker, and that stands out more because the related articles in those topic areas are also weaker.
Anyway, I wanted to give a few suggestions since I had intended to review the article in more depth and the timing didn't work out. Good luck! Opabinia regalis (talk) 20:38, 24 April 2015 (UTC)
Since you worked on Conjecture, I was wondering if you might be interested in improving the draft at Draft:Guess. I am particularly interested in finding some good page images to illustrate the concept of guessing. Cheers! bd2412 T 02:09, 3 May 2015 (UTC)
There is no version of the "Principal of Permanence" fro two variables. For example f(z,w)=z vanishes on set with accumulation point. Gamelin has no discussion in two or more variables. This was really bad. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Lost-n-translation (talk • contribs) 09:05, 8 July 2015 (UTC)
Gamelin is a book concerning holomorphic functions in one complex variable. You wrote in the Wikipedia article that f(z,w) is an analytic function and you cited Gamelin. This would require that the notion of an analytic function of two variables be defined in Gamelin. gamelin doesn't do this. Instead he supposes the function is separately analytic (which turns out by Hartog's theorem to be equivalent). In any case, the example that I provided is not an opinion, it is a counterexample to the statement that you made. You apparently did not understand what is written in Gamelin, and so you wrote something that is not logically equivalent. It's really dangerous for someone who apparently has no training in mathematics to put things that he thinks he understands up on a Wikipedia page. That's not an opinion.Lost-n-translation (talk) 14:46, 8 July 2015 (UTC)
I'm not particularly concerned about warring over this article. Anyone who reads the article will notice that the section you inserted has several mistakes (such as Latex not working), and will look in the history to find the original statement. Because you cannot change the user history, I will not bother making any new changes. Brirush (talk) 15:58, 8 July 2015 (UTC)
I don't have time to fix either. I am deleting the section that you created because the statement was not correct and did not agree with what Gamelin wrote. What Gamelin wrote is correct. If you want to write exactly what Gamelin wrote, then I will have no problem. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Lost-n-translation (talk • contribs) 17:02, 8 July 2015 (UTC)
And my point is not to got to war over this, but to make you aware that you just can't misquote mathematical statements in Wikipedia. It's really bad for Wikipedia. I want to tell my PhD students that they can use wikipedia, but... — Preceding unsigned comment added by Lost-n-translation (talk • contribs) 17:06, 8 July 2015 (UTC)
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Apatosaurus
[edit]Hi, we recently re-nominated Apatosaurus for FA. Would you like to take another look? LittleJerry (talk) 22:41, 12 September 2015 (UTC)
Categoryies: X-importance occupations articles
[edit]Rather than gving you 5 notifications, I put this as a message. I requested the deletion of the categories Low/Mid/High/Top and No-importance "occupations articles" as the categories are not used and the categories "Occupations articles", which you created, are in use. Hope you don't mind. © Tbhotch™ (en-2.5). 20:37, 8 October 2015 (UTC)
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extended hiatus
[edit]noticed you've been away for quite some time (life happens, it's cool).
just wanted to thank you on behalf of all the wikipedian mathematicans for making such large, valuable edits to the topology sections a year and some change ago.
hopefully when things are less turbulent we will see you inaction. again we can't thank you enough for your edits. they were exceptional in terms of both quantity and quality. 174.3.155.181 (talk) 22:01, 18 June 2016 (UTC)
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Finite group
[edit]Hi Brian, In your edit at 18:25, 28 April 2014 to Finite group you introduced the sentence:
- The classification of the finite simple groups is a theorem stating that every finite simple group belongs to one of four categories described below.
But there is no list of such four categories in the article Finite group. The sentence is clearly referring the table:
Could the paragraph in Finite group be clarified? Should the relevant table, of a short version of it, be reproduced below the remark? Actually, I think that might be a good idea in this case. How would you fix it?--Toploftical (talk) 23:36, 16 December 2016 (UTC)
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I see that you are starting improving Geometry. On my side, I am doing a similar work on Euclidean space, most of it being already done. Because of the strong relation between these articles, some of my work could be useful for you, either for avoiding technical details or for improving some explanations (some of my explanations are there because I was not satisfied with what I have found elsewhere in WP, for example for the history of the definition). I hope that this will really help you. D.Lazard (talk) 16:20, 14 September 2019 (UTC)
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Changes to JMP (statistical software) page
[edit]Brirush, would you be willing to take a look at some changes I requested here to a page about an analytics software company I work for? I saw that you were a mathematician and thought the subject may interest you. Arati Mejdal (talk) 20:27, 5 May 2021 (UTC)
COI request
[edit]Hi Brirush, Given your interest in analytics, I was wondering if you would be willing to participate here. This is a page about an analytics company, but much of the content has become about political controversies. I have disclosed a COI and offered a draft of what I think is a more balanced page that still includes the controversies with due weight and while presenting both sides, but still looks like a page about an analytics company, rather than one about politics. If you have time to chip-in, it would be greatly appreciated. Janine Lloyd-Jones (talk) 11:37, 19 November 2021 (UTC)
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A goat for you!
[edit]hi
TheUnabashedUkrainian (talk) 14:24, 3 March 2023 (UTC)
A pie for you!
[edit]Thanks very much for your help with the source review for Affine symmetric group -- I deeply appreciate it! JBL (talk) 19:12, 23 August 2023 (UTC) |
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