User talk:Michael Hardy/Archive1Welcome to user-land! :-) (bwahahahah!) -- Tarquin 20:27 Jan 9, 2003 (UTC) Hi, Michael, We obviously share and interest in Archimedes and statistics. Thanks for improving the explanation of Archimedes' theorem on the area of the parabola, and correcting my mistakes in the list of his books. I am writing from memory, since my copy of Heath is sitting on a shelf several thousand miles from me, so it's very good that there's someone out there to set me straight. -- Miguel Just curious. Are you Michael Hardy from MIT, Michael Hardy from Texas (I found the two names on Google) or other Michael Hardy? wshun 00:49, 17 Aug 2003 (UTC)
Here's why I think the content of "Generatics" is not taught anywhere. The American Mathematical Monthly of the Mathematical Association of America is considered the magazine for college math teachers, who prepare HS and Middle School teachers. In 1979, when I started at Naval Research Laboratory, with an excellent library, I spent many lunch hours, sandwich in hand, searching copies of AMM from first issue to last for an article on this subject, even mention of Hamilton's vector form. Nada. I then. in 1979, sent a one page explanation of this. It was rejected as "too difficult" for their readers. Next year, in 1980, I sent essentially the same article. No rejection or even notice of my submission. In 1981, ditto, with a rejection, again "too difficult". In 1982, 1983, 1984, no rejection, no notice of submission. Then I started sending a two sentence letter about this. Never printed.Twice a year, until my retirement in 1990, 12 letters in all -- each a 2-sentence letter, only syntactically varied. Never printed. Somehow it is heresy. And no one will tell me why.jonhays 00:29, 22 Sep 2003 (UTC)
Hi - fab work on Boolos, Second-order logic (LONG awaited) and Cantor's Theorem and first uncountability proof. I added some bits and links to my stuff. There is still a confusion between the diagonal argument (which explicitly mentions the reals i think) and Cantor's Theorem (which simply says for any set S, P(S) > S). Not sure this is entirely clear. Dbuckner Hi Michael. Good job spotting my error in the Markov property article! Ben Cairns 03:45, 18 Nov 2003 (UTC) I've nominated you for adminship. If you accept, please reply at Wikipedia:Requests for adminship. Maximus Rex 06:53, 1 Dec 2003 (UTC) Hi Michael. Would you mind having a look at User:Bjcairns/Probability? I have an idea to build a table of contents for people wanting to learn probability from the Wikipedia, and would greatly appreciate your input. I imagine some kind of pre- or proto-Wikibooks thing. (Any other probability people reading this are also most welcome!) Thanks, Ben Cairns 00:37, 5 Dec 2003 (UTC) CHALLENGE PROBLEM. Doggle Company has a fleet of 10 vehicles: 4 vans, 3 small trucks, 2 big trucks, 1 sedan. What is the probability, ceteris paribus, that. at a given time, 4 vehicles will be in use? Please note that this is not the multinomial probability distribution , which samples distinguishable items from a distinguishable population. Rather, it samples undistinguished items from a distinguishable population. The answer is found at http://members.fortunecity.com/jonhays/parprob.htm , which fills in a critcal gap in statistical literature. authored by User:Jonhays0, 03:12, 5 Dec 2003 You're now an administrator -- Tim Starling 00:32, Dec 6, 2003 (UTC) Congratulations. If I had realised you weren't already one I would nominated you long ago. I know we have clashed on occasion but I am glad to see that someone who does so much good work on wikipedia is getting proper recognition. We could almost call you our editor-in-chief or at least proofwriter-in-chief. Good luck! FearÉIREANN 01:09, 6 Dec 2003 (UTC)
Hi there. Congrats on the adminship - join the club! You were asking why "Penny" was capitalised in the chapter titles but not in the introductory chapter -- the reason is the articles' subject is "Penny" and the "English" or "British" is just a qualifier. "History of the English penny" was not my title for the article, as it had a more hierarchical name to match all the other denominations linked off "British coinage" but someone else took a dislike to it and renamed it... not my idea! Arwel 03:03, 6 Dec 2003 (UTC) I've found a misplaced reference showing that "generatics" did not start with me in content, only in name. The book, "Learn from the Masters", edited by Dwetz, Fauvel, Bekken, Johannsson, Katz (Mathematical Association of America, 1991), says on p. 286, "It was not until 1894 that J. Tannery introduced the arithmetic of rationals as pairs [vectors] of integers." (Jules Tannery (1818-1910), French, is cited ONLINE.)--In 1957, I received a grant from the National Science Foundation to organize the first NSF Workshop in Puerto Rico, planned for high math school teachers (some from States). I taught "Foundations of Mathematics". I was sent papers (later lost) from previous Workshops. One set described Tannery's work and Hamilton's formulation of complex numbers as pairs or vectors of reals. The formulator filled in by deriving integers from pairs or vectors of natural numbers. The latter shows how "the law of signs" derives from CLOSURE on DEFINED DIFFERENCES (DDs) of naturals : (a - b), s.t. subtrahend is not greater than minuend, hence, a natural number. Critical is multiplication law for DD. From standard multiplication algorithm, find that, for DDs, (a - b) * (c - d) = (a*c + (-b)*(-d)) + (a*(-d) + (-b)*c). Applying, 10 = 5*2 = (9 - 4)*(2 - 0) = 18 + (-4)*(2) + 0 = 10, hence, (-4)*(2) must act as a subtrahend -8, leading to "negative times positive equals negative" rule. Applying product rule to 30 = 6*5 = (9 - 3) - (7 - 2) = (63 + (-3)*(-2)) - (18 + 21) = (63 - 39) + (-3)*(-2) = 24 + x = 30, hence, x = 6 = (-3)*(-2), leading to "negative times negative equals positive" rule. This is forced by CLOSURE on DDs. However, in the "Generating arithmetic" article which I initiated, some one put in that CLOSURE is a concept from category theory, very advanceed math. Yet, the above book, on p. 260, says, "For Galois (1830), Jordan (1870), and even in Klein's "Lectures on the Icosohedron" (1884), groups were defined by the one axiom of closure. The other axioms were implicit in the context of their discussions -- finite groups of transformations." So CLOSURE goes back at least to 1830.Jonhays0 Ok... What is the reason to have a self-link? - UtherSRG 00:36, 3 Jan 2004 (UTC)
In my mind multiple comparisons is part of analysis of variance but simultaneous statistical inference is broader, including things like confidence bands in regression.Cutler 20:34, 3 Jan 2004 (UTC) I have no idea whether to put it here or not. I am still not very familiar with these systems, but I would want to say thank you, for your welcome and your advice. -Sothis just want to say thanks for the many quality math articles you contributed. I enjoyed them extremely. Xah P0lyglut 14:06, 2004 Jan 7 (UTC)
Michael, thanks for the comments on L-S. I still had the other comment, to more with the internal conection between this, your article on Second-order logic, and the other on First-order logic. As follows: My difficulty is what "first order" sentences are. It says under First-order logic that "first-order logic is strong enough to formalize all of set theory and thereby virtually all of mathematics." But it also says " It [FOL] is a stronger theory than sentential logic, but a weaker theory than arithmetic, set theory, or second-order logic." Yet under Second-order logic we have "second-order logic differs from first-order logic in that it allows quantification over subsets of a domain, or functions from the domain into itself, rather than only over individual members of the domain." I have difficulty in understanding how "first-order logic is strong enough to formalize all of set theory and thereby virtually all of mathematics." But also that FOL by implication does not allow "quantification over subsets of a domain". These statements seem to contradict each other. If FOL does not allow quantification over subsets of a domain, how can it "formalize all of set theory and thereby virtually all of mathematics."? Regards, Dean Hi Michael, if the idea appeals to you, I'd like you to review Principle of indifference. If you choose to do so, and you see something that needs fixing but don't feel like doing it yourself, I'll be keeping an eye on the talk page. Cheers, Cyan 01:41, 15 Jan 2004 (UTC) CHALLENGE PROBLEM. Doggle Company has a fleet of 10 vehicles: 4 vans, 3 small trucks, 2 big trucks, 1 sedan. What is the probability, ceteris paribus, that at a given time, 4 vehicles will be in use? Please note that this is not the multinomial probability distribution, which samples distinguishable items from a distinguishable population. Rather, it samples undistinguished items from a distinguishable population. The answer is found at http://members.fortunecity.com/jonhays/parprob.htm , which fills in a critcal gap in statistical literature.jonhays 17:54, 17 Jan 2004 (UTC) Claiming old edits of yoursOut of an off chance on reading Talk:Aluminum, I noticed a number of edits you probably made when you were logged out. If you like, you can claim the edits under 131.183.84.196 if you still have access to that IP. Thanks, and HTH Dysprosia 09:04, 21 Feb 2004 (UTC) Re: I. J. Good and [1]. It may interest you to know that Bruno de Finetti did in fact refer to him as "Irving Good" in a "Farewell Lecture" delivered at the Istituto Matematico G. Castelnuevo on the 29th of November, 1976 (translated and published as Probability: Beware of Falsifications in "New Developments in the Applications of Bayesian Methods", Ahmet Aykaç and Carlo Brumat eds., 1977). -- Cyan 03:00, 2 Mar 2004 (UTC)~ Sugestion concerning the use of TeX on WikipediaOn most browsers, TeX looks terrible when embedded in text, like this: . When it is "displayed", rather than embedded in text, it should be indented, like this: and not like this:
Michael Hardy 22:06, 8 Mar 2004 (UTC)
Michael, in the book "Proofs without words", there is another nice visual proof (using a circle) of Pythagorean theorem, attributed to "Michael Hardy",...any relation? Revolver 03:07, 19 Mar 2004 (UTC)
Hi, It's seems like we are having a "little" Edit War on Newcomb's paradox. Ben insists that it IS NOT a paradox (he even putted a silly green box with an irony by David Hume -- see Newcomb's paradox history page). I yet talked to him but he doesnt want to hear me! See the history pages on Newcomb's paradox and William Newcomb for more info And please, edit this page, its more than 37k long --Dobrowsky Mdob 01:28, 22 Mar 2004 (UTC) Newcomb's ParadoxNewcomb's paradox is not a paradox because reverse causation is defined in the problem. Please return the David Hume quotation. Bensaccount 04:05, 22 Mar 2004 (UTC) Michael, thanks for the articles on holomorphic and analytic functions, esp. the proof of holomorphic ==> analytic. Some classes don't make the distinction clear. Revolver 05:32, 1 Apr 2004 (UTC)
Hi thanks for your edit on statististical efficiency. Would you cast your eye over my recent Cochran's theorem? I ask because I'm trying to get my brain round it and I figure that writing a wiki article is the best way to learn. best Robinh 08:31, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC) Mann-Whitney and other stats mattersHi Michael-- thanks for fixing up the maths in the Mann-Whitney U test. I have just put up a page on the Page test, a little known but very useful generalisation of Spearman's rank correlation coefficient, which so far as I can see is otherwise undocumented on the web. The maths on that needs fixing, too, but I will get round to it eventually... More important, would you be able to have a look at the terminology etc? I am a user of stats rather than a statistician and there is always a risk I have committed a solecism. I'd be grateful. I have added it to the list of statistical topics. Do you think we should have a subsidiary list of statistical significance tests? seglea 01:36, 5 May 2004 (UTC) Where did the page go?Special:Undelete/Single_photon_emission_computerized_tomography: the log shows you, at 01:19, 25 Jun 2004, moving it to '''Why SPECT?''' Similar to X-ray Computed Tomography (CT) or Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT) allows us to visualize functional information about; the resulting redirect page was, as you might expect, severely broken. The long title to which you moved it still shows up in the full-text search results, but following the link takes me to a non-existent page. Do you know what happened? —No-One Jones 06:14, 25 Jun 2004 (UTC)
Bravo!I still don't care to learn trig, and have forgotten all I ever knew, but bravo on What is trigonometry used for? That's a great article. jengod 00:15, Jun 26, 2004 (UTC) Math tags are nice, but...The <math> tags are nice, but we probably want to refrain from using it whenever there is a reasonable substitute.
The pictures not only cost bandwidth, but also hurt the eyes when mixed in-line.
Also, I think it is good to respect other people's styles and let them use their own style of spacing, numbering, and such.
Well, no offence, but recently I couldn't help but notice that your name appeared in a bunch edits (e.g. subadditive function, Lubell-Yamamoto-Meshalkin inequality, etc.) unrelated to the correctness or accuracy of those articles.
In some places, I feel that your addition of <math> tags were not necessary.
Perhaps having a little toleration to other people's style would be good?
It is almost like I am not even allowed to put the "in mathematics" part at the end of the first sentence and have to be corrected.
While I understand that we all should respect each other's right of editing, I just feel that some of those edits were overdone and are counterproductive in the sense that it creates frustration and doesn't add value.
I won't blow the whole thing out of proportion here.
Just wanted to let you know where I stand.
No one is going to argue about grammar and spelling with you.
My main problem is that your sense of "style superiority" is rather personal and unconvincing.
I have already stated the reason why I disagreed with your choice, so I won't repeat them here.
From where I see it, you are not making the articles better— you are just making other people write like you.
And I strongly believe that kind of attitude doesn't help promote respect and cooperation among users.
Introduction to articles (Style)Hi, I have read your conversation with Peter Kwok and I totally agree with you. I think your edits on the style of exisiting articles are very good and greatly increase the comprehensibility of the articles. Personal style is nice and all but someone needs to keep the style (design) of the articles consistent. But enough of the compliments here is my question: How do I write the introductory sentence in an article on mathematics if I want to say
For example an article on Triangular matrices.
This sound ok, but I would like to have the more general category (mathematics) before the subfield (linear algebra) so focus of the sentence narrows down as the reader progresses through the sentence. Any ideas ? Or is there already some sort of convention in wikipedia ? MathMartin 11:21, 1 Jul 2004 (UTC)
I've hopefully improved the article. Is it more comprehensible? Dysprosia 09:38, 2 Jul 2004 (UTC)
Hasse diagram: picturesYour pictures in the article on Hasse diagrams are fine, but their encoding (jpg) is rather unfortunate. Pictures that only contain huge areas of single colors can nicely (and lossless) be compressed as png's. I hope you still got the (xfig??) sources. Just export them as PNG and they will be much smaller and of much better quality. I added some more pictures to the page -- just compare their size and look (they were resized with The Gimp, so there is some grayskale interpolation which makes the files bigger ;-) --Markus Krötzsch 01:04, 8 Jul 2004 (UTC) Rest, residue, and remainder(From merism) --- I don't use that one myself, but you are right; I have seen it. Smerdis of Tlön 02:29, 21 Jul 2004 (UTC)
RequestProbabilistic foam. -SV 16:47, 29 Jul 2004 (UTC) Category:ProofsDear god, the whole categorization scheme is a mess. People went off willy nilly and created whatever category made sense instead of trying to use some established categorization scheme, or even discussing them much. I put that in that category pragmatically as the category that discussed that kind of issue currently, not to say it was correct or anything. - Taxman 22:04, Jul 29, 2004 (UTC) Names of World Countries in GreekHere is a list of the countries of the world in Greek. The names are not in English, but their internet domains are; e.g., Φιλιππίνες (Filippínes) is PH which is the Philippines. --Chris 00:45, 16 Aug 2004 (UTC)
TeX style guideHi, i would like to start a TeX style guide. People like you and Mat cross corrected my TeX but I guess after some time you get bored to point out the same mistakes all the time. Aside from the TeX style there could be advice how to name variables so the wikipedia math articles are consistent (e.g. for a curve because it is the c in the greek alphabet). Is there already such a page in wikipedia ? Do you know of any style guide outside wikipedia or is the correct TeX style just an oral tradition ? Where would I put such a page ? Thanks. MathMartin 10:18, 27 Aug 2004 (UTC)
Statistics lead sectionI've proposed a new lead section for the Statistics article. See Talk:Statistics#My attempt at article lead section and my comment immediately above that one. Comments welcome. - dcljr 19:38, 2 Sep 2004 (UTC) More on 0/0(Written to User:Barnaby dawson and copied here). What you've done is very good. I'm actually experiencing sibling-rivalry-like pangs because I started working on this—you can see what I've got on User:Dpbsmith/temp—but what you've got is much more straightforward and to the point. I might come back and polish it sometime. What I've written myself currently has too much in it about numbers and intuition and not enough about 0/0. I think you should definitely copy what you have to a temporary location somewhere in case the 0/0 page does get deleted. I'm not sure where this material should go. It could go in Division by zero or Indeterminate form or possibly on a new page, Zero divided by zero. I'm going to put these comments on Michael Hardy's talk page, too, and see if he has any thoughts. Actually, I have a technical question for Michael Hardy. It's one of the things that has hung me up a bit. What is the most correct answer to the question "What is the value of sin(0)/0?" I guess the question is, what is the meaning of "sin(0)/0"? If it means the value of sin(0) divided by 0, then the answer is "indeterminate" or "NaN" (not a number), as I don't believe 0/0 is part of any definition of "number" that has ever been proposed. On the other hand, if it means "the limit of sin(x)/x as x approaches zero," the answer is not indeterminate at all, it is 1. It just "feels wrong" to me to say that sin(0)/0 is indeterminate, though; I feel that it "is" 1. Thoughts? An explanation as to why certain mathematical terms have been defined in the way they have is not necessarily without merit. We must remember that those who are reading our encylopedia may not have a degree in mathematics as you and I have. For those who have not studied mathematics the material on the page "indeterminate form" does not explain why 0/0 is regarded as undefined. We should also be open minded enough to understand that some people may have a different notion of what a function is than we do. To explain to these people why indeterminate forms are regarded as such we must do more than discuss a few limits. I would point out that the space of analytic functions on riemann surfaces is an alternative intuitive way of viewing functions and many people will start with a similar intuitive notion of a function (they need not understand riemann surfaces or the complex plain to have some similar intuitive notion). The links given at the bottom of the page are interesting further reading for people interested in foundational issues. I archived the original text before the revert and I am going to put up a new page using this text: zero divided by zero. I should point out that the decision on the page cannot be read as a decision on the rewrite as the voting after the rewrite was 4 to keep 1 to delete. Barnaby dawson 10:12, 20 Sep 2004 (UTC) OCA AutocephalyI'm adding this on the off-chance you're still interested in a question you asked on my talk page several months ago. I'm only an occasional contributor here and don't check it very often so I just noticed it now, but I figured better late than never. My apologies. The issue with OCA autocephaly is that it was granted unilaterally by the Moscow Patriarchate. This would appear to be legitimate since the American Metropolia, as it was then known, was part of the Russian Church. However, Constantinople is promoting the theory that they and they alone has the authority to grant autocephaly and that therefore the OCA's autocephalous status is not valid. I'm not sure what they base this theory on, frankly, since historically that's simply not how it's worked. The result is that the Slavic Churches generally recognize OCA autocephaly and the Hellenic Churches generally don't. There's little practical effect. Since as far as Constantinople is concerned the OCA is still part of the Church of Russia, the OCA primate's name doesn't appear in their diptychs. Were there to be a Pan-Orthodox council of some kind no OCA bishop could attend without controversy unless he appeared as part of the Russian delegation. But the OCA is in full Eucharistic communion with all the other Churches including those where its autocephaly is unrecognized. This is an administrative issue more than anything else. There's no doubt a great deal of ulterior motive going on here. The native flock in Constantinople itself is reduced to a few thousand souls; barely enough to keep the place running. The lion's share of their income come from their American parishes. Money is also an issue for other Old World Churches in impoverished areas with substantial American flocks, such as Antioch. Were they to recognize OCA autocephaly, they would also perforce recognize it as the legitimate Orthodox Church of America and could no longer canonically justify their own presence there even were they to employ the mightiest of weasel words. Recognition would therefore seriously jeopardize their income stream. It's hard to blame them since left to their own resources they wouldn't have much, but it does leave the American Churches in a canonical mess. Disclaimer: I belong to an OCA parish. Although my original remark was in the interest of NPOV, I have made no attempt to be such here. --Csernica 02:29, 29 Sep 2004 (UTC) DankeOkay, thanks for reassuring me about Northwest Angle. Three cheers for new maps. Thanks. jengod 02:38, Sep 30, 2004 (UTC) Imaginary colorsHi, yeah the "complimentary" was a typo. Although I believe the meaning of "complementary color" in the fashion world is more or less "complimentary"... Overall, the complementary color article would be scientifically superseded by an adequate complementary wavelength article. The guts of this is already laid out in the (my) dominant wavelength article. The information worth keeping at complementary color would be the historical/social stuff: painting primary/secondaries, fashion meanings, etc. Imaginary colors: not my forte but it's good for my education to try to explain it, so I'll give it a shot. The canon is the textbook Color Science (and more recent variations) by Wyszecki and Stiles. I don't know what your background is, so forgive me my pedagogy. If you check out International Commission on Illumination, you'll see the CIE 1931 representation of human perceivable color space (for the "standard observer"). The short story on imaginary colors is simply that anything outside the horseshoe shape is an imaginary stimulus; you can assign it coordinates in the color coordinates system, but it cannot actually be evoked in the human eye; it's "bluer than blue" or "redder than red", etc. This is a pretty trivial point; the more interesting question is "why would we care about imaginary stimuli?". If you take a second look at the CIE diagram, you can tell immediately that this is an important question; look at the axes that the horseshoe shape is plotted on. These are not axes of real primary colors; the point 0,0 in the CIE x,y system is outside the range of perceivable colors. Weird! Why would the CIE parameterize their color space based on imaginary axes? Okay, here's where primaries come in: as you can see at gamut, no three primaries are going to define a gamut triangle that covers the entire horseshoe of possible human perceivable colors. This often comes as a surprise to math types since the human visual system is based at the input level on a set of three detectors. It seems like if we could just pick one light spectrum that stimulates only the blue cone, one spectrum for red, and one spectrum for green, then of course we could stimulate the cones in any combination and thus produce any possible perceivable color; since the human color system starts with a parameterization of light spectra into three variables, shouldn't we need only three different primary stimuli to cover the entire space? The problem is that there is no spectrum that stimulates only the green cone, so it isn't possible to get the necessary three pure basis functions for generating all possible greens. You can see this from the cone response functions in the plot at right. This plot shows the response amplitudes of the three cone types to pure monochromatic light stimuli of varying wavelengths. As you move along the x-axis, you are stimulating with different pure wavelengths (basically going through the rainbow spectrum from indigo to deep red). If you think about it, you can see that there is a problem in the area around 500-600 nm. For the red and blue primaries it's a no-brainer; you pick wavelengths at the extremes of the spectrum that only stimulate these cones individually, giving you maximal linear combinatorial flexibility. But what are you going to pick for your green primary color? Something around 500, where you get mostly green response, followed by red, followed by blue, or something around 600 where you get red response followed by green response? If you pick 500 for green primary, then you won't be able to recreate 600 with your three primaries because you won't have any way of getting green without adding blue, which you don't want for 600. If you pick 600 for your green primary, you won't be able to recreate 500, because your green primary always has too much red in it. As a math type, you could probably state this as a linear algebra, dependent systems sort of conflict (in fact, if you can do this off the cuff, I'd like to hear how you'd describe it), but I'm not gonna get into that :). What the visually minded (myself) can see is that on the horseshoe CIE diagram, the greens problem reads out really nicely as the impossibility to cover the horseshoe with a (contained) triangle; you can cover the red and blue ends of the space pretty well with the corners of a triangle, but because of the bulge around the green perimeter, you aren't gonna be able to do justice to that area of the spectrum no matter what primary (triangle corner) you pick there. In practical color science, there are ways to get experimental measurements defining only the green cone response. For example, you pick a green primary at 600 and then ask how much red must be subtracted from the stimulus in order to recreate 500. How this subtraction is calculated practically has to do with color matching experiments and we don't need to get into it. The point is, now we can cover the entire perceivable color space with RGB primaries, it just requires negative primary coefficients sometimes. This is ugly, but it's functional, so one version of the CIE horseshoe shape is actually plotted on RGB coordinates with part of the visible area extending into the negative coordinates (mostly for R but a little bit for G too). However, the negative numbers are ugly, and make calculations harder (in turn making color technology more computationally demanding). Therefore, the standard CIE horseshoe is plotted on XYZ coordinates, a linear transformation of RGB that moves the visible area out of the negative ranges. So the XYZ coordinates are a transformation of real RGB primaries into more convenient, imaginary primaries. Whew, that was a lot longer than I expected. Hopefully it was helpful. Let me know if you have more questions. Maybe a discussion like this will eventually become an article... So little time... --Chinasaur 03:22, 5 Oct 2004 (UTC) Heartful ThanksMichael, please accept my gratitude for the nice and perfect work you did in the Romanian Orthodox Church article. Much appreciated! And also your clean tidy pages, articles, and even driving licence are appreciated :O). We certainly need more of your candid, true editors like you! This was the ORIGINAL Wiki spirit, and with you I see it's not agonizing. Many thanks - irismeister 18:54, 2004 Oct 10 (UTC)
Could have been worseAt least I didn't write "konsensos" Dogface 04:00, 13 Oct 2004 (UTC) Gian-Carlo RotaHi, Mike! I don't know whether you've seen saw my suggestions for possible improvement at Talk:Gian-Carlo_Rota—especially the one that I didn't withdraw. If you haven't, I'd appreciate it if you'd take a look. —JerryFriedman 18:54, 13 Oct 2004 (UTC) Hi, Michael. You may have noticed that the article made feature status, and I wanted to officially thank you and give you credit for starting the article and making valuable edits. I also recently changed some of the opening equations, and I wanted to ask your opinion about the display here. I am wondering if there might be a more visually appealing or appropriate way to list three similar formulas. Of course, your other comments and edits are always welcome, as well. Best, Andrew (Fadethree) 21:43, 13 Oct 2004 (UTC)
Hi Michael - I made the disambig as a result of the talk page discussion on whether it was a polling specific term - I was sort of hoping that someone who knew more than me on this would add usages in other fields - it used to link to something else that escapes me for a moment, but someone took it off saying it was not quite the same thing. Take a look and see if you can find the appropriate things to link to. Thanks for noticing, Mark Richards 18:15, 23 Oct 2004 (UTC) HelloHi. I am searching for people interested in computer science and math. I found you via the history of the Boolean algebra article. I had a look at your userpage and understood that you have an interest in these areas, so I thought you might be interested to get invited in a new computer science project (not in wikipedia). See User:Npc/List. Thanks. Npc 21:06, 17 Oct 2004 (UTC) Name impersonatorUser:MichelHardy looks like his username is designed to impersonate you, but it could be a coincidence. →Raul654 04:38, Oct 28, 2004 (UTC) Thank youThank you for your recent edit to the Mung Bean article. you are apparently one of the quiet strivers for excellence. Thanks for being a good example.Pedant 22:45, 2004 Nov 1 (UTC) Metropolitan / ArchbishopThere are in the Orthodox Church actually only 3 ranks to the priesthood. Bishop, Presbyter, and Deacon. All other titles are honorary based sometimes on the length of service of the priest, and sometimes the prominance of his territory (See). The various jurisdictions within the church have different traditions as to how they dispence these titles. In the Greek tradition any bishop who holds an ancient See is called Metropolitan even if that see is a small villiage. Archbishop is usually reserved for the lead bishop in a national church unless it happens to be Jerusalem, Constantinople, Alexandria, Russia, or Antioch; in which case its Patriarch (Or Pope). I have never heard of a Metropolitan Archbishop though its perfectly possible one of the jurisdictions provide this position. In any case, the most ancient patriarch, Metropolitan, or Archbishop are still equal in rank to the lowliest bishop over the smallest congregation except perhaps in adminstrative duties. Phiddipus
in regards to the "hack" page redirectMichael, Truth for true, I haven't (hadn't) taken a good look at the "hack" page--only a cursory-enough one to notice that the (former) hack (disambiguous) entry for hacker pointed to it, which was clearly wrong (while "hack" probably does contain info re: hacking, I couldn't find it at first glance, which is enough to constitute 'confusing and inappropriate' in my mind). I also saw that hack writer was a stub. Put two and two together, and... But the point is, while my judgment itself might have been sound, it was based on misinformation--which you've since corrected. I like your changes and support them wholeheartedly. Now all that's left is (re)building the "hack writer" page... ~CWatson (codename marblespire) Radius of convergenceHi, you are right that I didn't read it carefully enough, but the problem remains (moderated by your followup edit) that calling "infinity" a "quantity" is rather problematic and "nonnegative quantity" even more so. We are not referring to a particular infinite cardinal here but rather to a notation of convenience that is more like a symbol indicating the absence of a quantity than a quantity itself. --Zero 10:16, 18 Nov 2004 (UTC) How you edited this, " If the population is normally distributed, then without that term, what is left is the simpler expression for the maximum-likelihood estimate" is far too late in this article. Would you mind moving it up to a better location. Pdbailey 04:40, 19 Nov 2004 (UTC)
And I've reverted. Your "fix" caused me to realize what you meant by your comments above. But you're mistaken; no assumption of normality is needed where you put it. Michael Hardy 02:12, 5 Dec 2004 (UTC) Thanks for pointing that out. To be fair, what I wrote was correct but inferior in that it is less general than what you wrote. I tried to clarify what was there with the assumption you pointed out was needed on my talk page. Pdbailey 19:34, 5 Dec 2004 (UTC) Article LicensingHi, I've started the Free the Rambot Articles Project which has the goals of getting users to multi-license all of their contributions that they've made to...
using the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike (CC-by-sa) version 1.0 and 2.0 Licenses or into the public domain if they prefer. The CC-by-sa license is a true free documentation license that is similar to the GFDL (which every contribution made to Wikipedia is licensed under), but it allows other projects, such as WikiTravel, to use our articles (See the Multi-licensing Guide for more information). Since you are among the top 1000 most active Wikipedians, I was wondering if you would be willing to multi-license all of your contributions or at minimum those on the geographic articles. To allow us to track those users who muli-license their contributions, many users copy and paste the {{DualLicenseWithCC-BySA-Dual}} template (or {{MultiLicensePD}} for public domain) into their user page, but there are other templates for other options at Template messages/User namespace. The following examples could also copied and pasted into your user page:
OR
Or if you wanted to place your work into the public domain, you could replace {{DualLicenseWithCC-BySA-Dual}} with {{MultiLicensePD}}. If you only prefer using the GFDL, I would like to know that too. Please let me know at my talk page what you think. -- Ram-Man 20:33, Nov 29, 2004 (UTC) Oppo moves this all around. I suggest you block him urgently. Gzornenplatz 02:21, Nov 26, 2004 (UTC) Algebra of random variablesThanks for saving the algebra of random variables from the clamor of the Boetians. When I finally get around to writing algebraic counterparts to the articles on the measure theory foundations of probability theory I trust you will be there to help me get them right ;-) — Miguel 02:43, 2004 Nov 28 (UTC) I think you might enjoy a glance at this article. :-) [[User:Dpbsmith|Dpbsmith (talk)]] 23:28, 29 Nov 2004 (UTC) New user thanksHello Michael, thanks for the advice, and sorry for the trouble. Your statistic articles have been a powerful help in my statistics course, by the way. user:sean3000 ProtocolHi, since I'm in a particularly masochistic mood, I've decided to tackle the morass known as Special:Whatlinkshere/Protocol, and in the process I intend to convert Protocol into a disambiguation page (so de-lousing it in the future will be infinitely easier). I wanted to solicit opinions as to how to divide up the existing content, and what to name the new page(s). My current thinking is to move it to Protocol (etiquette) (or maybe Protocol (diplomacy)), and Protocol (treaty). Do you have any improvements to suggest to that scheme? (We'll also need a Protocol (medicine), as I've discovered on some pages linked there.) Also, the computer-related protocol pages are a bit of a mess - we have Protocol (computing), but Network protocol and Communications protocol; I was thinking of renaming them all to the form "Protocol ({foo})" so they'd all have similar syntax. Do you think that is a good idea, or should I leave it alone? Noel (talk) 04:40, 5 Dec 2004 (UTC)
HELP a little girlColor Temperature needs a peek. Please help locate boo-boos. I'm tired I cannot see straight. dkroll2 Caley's FormulaThanks for the edits you made to the Caley's Formula article I created. It was the first serious proof I contributed here, so I was a little unsure about what to do for style. If you have any further tips, let me know. Thanks! --Zarvok Hi Michael, Thanks for writing A simple proof that 22/7 exceeds pi! It's a neat proof that I'd never seen before. I noticed you added
You seem frustrated with the software limitations. But is it appropriate to comment on that at the top of the article page? I think that sentence should be taken out. (On the other hand, the {{wrongtitle}} template has the benefit that it puts the article in Special:Whatlinkshere/Template:Wrongtitle, so that programmers know what software improvements are needed.) --Dbenbenn 21:46, 12 Dec 2004 (UTC) (David) Date FormatI notice that you have spent some effort and concern about the format of dates in Queen Victoria (and perhaps other places too). The 24 May 1819 format (as opposed to May 24, 1819) is not "French" but is the most common format in the rest of the world outside of North America. As a mathematician, you must appreciate that it is a consistent format, as the units of measure are in ascending magnitude. When dates are entered in proper Wiki style [[May 24]], [[1819]], the reader's Wiki skin will put them into the format the user has selected in his Wiki Preferences profile. Perhaps you have not yet selected one, and thus you see the default (the original entry format), instead of the format you would prefer to see? You may be wasting a lot of your time editing the format of a variable that get changed anyway at reading time for most other users. --StanZegel 03:45, 15 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Michael, you are in denial, so there's no use of me spending any more time on this. Spend your time rearranging dates all you want... the Wikipedia skin will set them aright per the user's preferences. --StanZegel 00:21, 17 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Partition2.jpgThanks for uploading Image:Partition2.jpg. I notice it currently doesn't have an image copyright tag. Could you add one to let us know its copyright status? (You can use {{gfdl}} if you release it under the GFDL, or {{fairuse}} if you claim fair use, etc.) If you don't know what any of this means, just let me know where you got the images and I'll tag them for you. Right now, I'll put it as unverified, but change it to what it's supposed to be when you get a chance. Thanks, Mattingly23 16:19, 18 Dec 2004 (UTC) Also, Image:PartitionLattice.jpg - Mattingly23 16:20, 18 Dec 2004 (UTC)
ThanksHi Michael. Thank you for your style tips, and for your useful corrections to mistakes in various articles. I'll remember your advice. :) Amelia Hunt 14:34, Dec 21, 2004 (UTC) It's a Non-Breakable SPace character, similar to TeX's use of the tilde character. I suppose Henrygb used it to prevent non-TeX formulas from being chopped in half in a potentially confusing manner. --MarkSweep 21:34, 23 Dec 2004 (UTC) Image tagThanks for uploading Image:Edgeworth.jpeg. I notice it currently doesn't have an image copyright tag. Could you add one to let us know its copyright status? (You can use {{gfdl}} if you release it under the GFDL, or {{fairuse}} if you claim fair use, etc.) If you don't know what any of this means, just let me know where you got the images and I'll tag them for you. Thanks so much, Aqua 05:17, Dec 24, 2004 (UTC) Are you following me?or just taking care of me? subtractive color We got 2 places now that refer to the fact that there is only additive and subtractive. get one out maybe? Maybe take this one out?
SLOW down. you are all over wiki land. You will have a heart attack if you don't slow down. printing four-color printing color printing Watcha gonna do with that tangled web? Ididn't cause it. --Dkroll2 04:04, Dec 29, 2004 (UTC) ModuloDear Michael, I just did some clean up of the modulo and modular arithmetic pages. They had much overlapping info, and clearly, the stuff about jargon use of the word module did not belong there. Probably the mod function either. Whatever its origin, now it is just a lowly function (its origin needs to be explained), and is no new terminology superseeding or competing with modular arithmetic. Now, I noticed you started reverting some of my stuff. Let's talk a bit before you undo every thing. I know, I should have talked before I started moving things, so ultimately it is my fault, but now, revering things back and forth is probably not the way to go. What do you think? I will keep on eye on my watchlist. Oleg Alexandrov 00:55, 2 Jan 2005 (UTC)
I've made this a redirect page. If it really needs to be separate from modular arithmetic, it should be made ABSOLUTELY CLEAR that people in computing are not the only ones who used this term nor the ones who invented it. People in computing find it VERY DIFFICULT to understand that some things were invented more than 25 years ago, and by people who are not in computer science. They think they invented mathematical induction, numbers, geometry, and language, and reading and writing, all within the last 25 years. Michael Hardy 00:53, 2 Jan 2005 (UTC)
I am still waiting for some feedback from you on my changes on the module page and related. I don't agree with you putting the redirect to modular arithmetic from the page describing the implementation of the mod function in computing. Modular arithmetic has nothing to do with that function, except that both notions came from the word module. I am considering putting back the modulo (computing) page. There was good info in there. Oleg Alexandrov 00:02, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC) Hi, could you review the Talk:Transfer operator;you added a link that I think doesn't belong. Pi symbolThanks for your feedback on my user page -- I've since taken a better look at the Wiki style guide. However, I wanted to know how you created the pi symbol. Is it hiding on my keyboard somewhere? (Apologies for sounding like a dolt.) --Westendgirl 05:42, 4 Jan 2005 (UTC) On gcr.jpgThe problem here is that Wikipedia can no longer allow images for which just permission has been granted. You will have to rediscuss this with Daniel Klain. Unless he is willing to relicense the image under the GFDL or similar license, the file will have to be deleted. Reply on my talk page, not least because this page is getting quite big and unwieldy. Peter O. (Talk) 05:05, Jan 17, 2005 (UTC) You're probably right, however, much more so than other similar articles I've checked, it seemed to rely too much on such terms. --Golbez 02:18, Jan 21, 2005 (UTC) GSL ReferencesHi Michael - I'm in a discussion with Zero0000 about including as a reference the GNU Scientific Library for the gamma function, specifically http://www.gnu.org/software/gsl/manual/gsl-ref.html#SEC120 I wanted to get your opinion on whether it is a good idea to include such a reference. It offers no useful information on the gamma function per se, but does inform the reader that it is available in GSL, how to call it from a c program, and since it is open source, will lead to an explicit algorithm for its calculation. Average ruleI'm thinking of nominating Average rule for deletion on the grounds that it is a neologism and original research. This article has existed since August 2004 without anyone questioning it or proposing it for deletion. Do you think it's legitimate? Do you know of any reasons I shouldn't nominate it for deletion? Dpbsmith (talk) 15:35, 25 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Re: Your grave doubts about slippery slopeActually I put that in. But this is a well-known formalization of the sorites or heap paradox. I certainly didn't invent it.CSTAR 19:33, 27 Jan 2005 (UTC)
good workI havenae read all the articles but i take it ya not a Taxi Driver I still have to brush up on my maths max rspct 01:38, 5 Feb 2005 (UTC)
Order StatisticsMichael, I would like to keep the heuristic method also on the proof since it provides a much more intutive understanding. I would like to add it under the rigorous proof..--Vaidhy 23:46, 8 Feb 2005 (UTC) New Mathematics WikiportalI noticed you've done some work on Mathematics articles. I wanted to point out to you the new Mathematics Wikiportal- more specifically, to the Mathematics Collaboration of the Week page. I'm looking for any math-related stubs or non-existant articles that you would like to see on Wikipedia. Additionally, I wondered if you'd be willing to help out on some of the Collaboration of the Week pages. I encourage you to vote on the current Collaboration of the Week, because I'm very interested in which articles you think need to be written or added to, and because I understand that I cannot do the enormous amount of work required on some of the Math stubs alone. I'm asking for your help, and also your critiques on the way the portal is set up. Please direct all comments to my user-talk page, the Math Wikiportal talk page, or the Math Collaboration of the Week talk page. Thanks a lot for your support! ral315 02:54, Feb 11, 2005 (UTC) Improper integralHello Michael. I replied to your objection on my talk page about my edits of the Improper integrals entry before I realized I should have posted it on your talk page. I apologize. Here is the link: my talk page. --Iamunknown 04:51, 21 Feb 2005 (UTC) I looked at the article, and I think how your present the truely-not-improper but improperly-evaluated integrals with infinite bounds of integration is fantastic. Thank you very much, and sorry for the disturbance. --Iamunknown 02:01, 27 Feb 2005 (UTC) Thanks for the warm welcomeThe hypothetical question: If someone were to discover a simple method for factoring large numbers, whom should they tell? When asked of Sir Z, he responded, "If the world's best minds, who attend each other's lectures cannot find one, no one scratching on a napkin at lunch between filling out insurance forms will." Wandadubbayou Extreme physical informationYour name in the version history and an empty talk page typically implies a sound article to me. But just now I was wondering about Extreme physical information and how heavily it should be linked to? Isn't that in essence a one person theory? It is visible in scholar.google.com, but somewhat below the threshold one would expect for an important concept. So, is it in proportion, that e.g. Uncertainty principle and Klein-Gordon equation link to Extreme physical information? --Pjacobi 23:03, 2005 Mar 2 (UTC) Comprise vs. composeSaw your edit on g theory ("They COMPOSE it. It COMPRISES them") and thought it deserved more than just a reversion. According to Webster's Dictionary of English Usage, the active construction "the grapes comprise the bunch" is the older of the two senses (the OED dates it to the 18th century) and remains in widespread use to this day. The younger passive construction "the bunch is comprised of grapes" is also in widespread usage. The usage you suggest, active but with a singular subject, Webster's says, "can be found from time to time." Language commentators love to pick on the active construction, but reveal their ignorance in doing so. Moreover, the usage you suggest, "they compose it", is ambiguous, as "compose" can mean comprise or construct. In this context, "they comprise it" is superior. --DAD 03:26, 4 Mar 2005 (UTC)
KnuthPlease -- we settled this question last November. Knuth lives.
Pick's theoremHow exactly is the paragraph that you edited in Pick's theorem more cohesive? To me it just seems wordier, and a bit non-standard. "Interior points of the polygon" seems like a standard locution. "Boundary points on the perimeter" is redundant; what information does it convey that is not already in the phrase "boundary points"? Where, besides the perimeter, would boundary points be? The boundary is the perimeter; in the present context, the two words are synonyms. Michael Hardy 04:10, 5 Mar 2005 (UTC) I'm pretty new, and am not sure if this is how I should respond, and whether or not you will receive this. I started out by making the words 'of' and 'on', 'in' and 'on'. Then I thought it needed a little more substance to make the senctence more understandable. I realize now that it would be fine in the previous version, with just the words 'in' and 'on' added, or how I have it now. I was just thinking about the grammar when I was changing it. Dylan McKenzie-Tavish Finneran 03:22, Mar 6, 2005 (UTC) Sufficient statistic to Sufficiency (statistics)I'm curious why you moved Sufficient statistic to Sufficiency (statistics) (almost 2 years ago to the day) when sufficiency contains nothing. :) Also, would you mind looking over estimation theory? Cburnett 23:13, 8 Mar 2005 (UTC)
TaThanks for the tips Mike Thruston 21:00, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC) Error?As far as I am concerned,it is the widespread bad habit of spacing after punctuation marks that is an error,and those who insist on introducing this error into the more efficient format I use have only themselves to blame for their wasted efforts.--Louis E./le@put.com/12.144.5.2 01:56, 18 Mar 2005 (UTC) Hi! As part of the Wiki Syntax cleanup effort, I came upon a redirect from Self energy to Self-energy, which you put up last month. Since the target does not currently exist, that redirect would normally be deleted, but there are a couple of articles linking to it. (And I'm not familiar enough with that field of expertise—whatever field that might be—to dare edit those links.) Would you be willing to write a stub for Self-energy? That'd solve the issue, and make me a much happier person. :) Fbriere 18:47, 25 Mar 2005 (UTC) Well, I couldn't find an official explanation to this (though there probably is one, deep in the bowels of Help), but broken redirects are not only candidates for deletion, they're actually candidates for speedy deletion. My take on this is that broken redirects are insidious, in that they show up as blue links in articles,
yet they don't lead anywhere. This is confusing for our users, and it hides problems from our contributors (who may otherwise spot a red link, and be inclined to submit material to it). I think the WP attitude would be that if you're willing to add a redirect, you should take a minute to add a stub at the end of it. This really makes a difference. -- Fbriere 20:59, 25 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Great, an edit war to start the weekend. :( I've raised this issue on the requests deletion policy talk page, which is what, frankly, you should have done in the first place. Feel free to argue for preemptive redirects there. I should also point out that random matrix theory looks, to me, like a bad link; it purports to explain a theory, yet no mention of this is made by the stub.
Are random matrices a purely theoretical construct? Or is RMT a theory that uses or is based on random matrices—in which case it should be a separate article? (I'm an algebra guy who always loathed statistics, so please forvive my total ignorance of this topic.) --Fbriere 00:12, 26 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Please be notified that I consider this edit to be vandalism, and consequently I have reverted this edit. There is a policy stated clearly here which explicitly covers deleting redirects in this situation (i.e. "They refer to non-existent pages. Before deleting a redirect, check to see if the redirect can be made useful by changing its target."). That is what the Wiki Syntax instructions say as well. I understand that if you put effort into creating such redirects that this would be frustrating. However, can I please suggest creating a one sentence substub at the target in this situation? That must surely be as much effort as creating the redirect, but without any of the problems inherent in creating redirects that point nowhere. Or, you can put the redirect listing page up on WP:VFD, although I genuinely don't think a vote of this nature is likely to succeed. Alternatively, you are welcome to try and get the policy changed through the usual processes. If the policy is so altered, then WP:WS will of course abide by that. Until then though, please do not shoot the messenger, or vandalise the messenger's pages. -- All the best, Nickj (t) 04:56, 26 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Michael, it's worth noting (as Nick will no doubt recall :-) that the last time we did a bunch of these "non-existent target" redirects on WP:RfD (sorry, I don't have the time to dig through the history to find the reference), I didn't simply delete the whole bunch, willy-nilly. Instead, I went to a lot of effort (as you can see see by the existence of this template, as well as some other ones) to try and exercise a fair amount of judgement, and not simply delete them all, including any that looked like the might be useful. (This would of course include most of the ones you created.) As you can see from my note here about this batch, again I'm going through this list carefully, and not simply bulk-deleting them. Noel (talk) 12:45, 26 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Intentional creation of pre-emptive redirectsRedirects with a non-existent target are explicitly listed in the criteria for speedy deletion, and have been for a long time. Calling something that is not only not prohibited but explicitly allowed "vandalism" is an insult against those who disagree with you. Using your sysop powers to prevent people from taking part in a good-faith effort to follow established policy is abusive. You have violated the protection policy by protecting a page you are involved in a dispute over. You have violated the no personal attacks policy by calling those you disagree with vandals. You are attempting to violate the Wikipedia:deletion policy by forcing us to keep things which are to be deleted. I simply don't see how you can justify this behavior. The only thing destructive here is your hostile attitude towards others. -- Cyrius|✎ 21:48, 26 Mar 2005 (UTC)
If an action is vandalism, then the people who practice it are vandals. Calling these redirects broken is no more bigoted than saying an article consisting of "He is a funny man that has created Factory and the Hacienda." should be deleted. -- Cyrius|✎ 22:13, 26 Mar 2005 (UTC)
That is true, and there is no person whom I have accused of engaging in that practice, nor do I know of any particular person engaging in it. Since I have never so accused anyone, I have not called anyone a vandal. Michael Hardy 22:23, 26 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Are you saying you fail to see the obvious value in having a redirect from complex societies to complex society before the latter page is created, including the fact that such a pre-emptive redirect helps facilitate creation of the latter article? Michael Hardy 23:18, 26 Mar 2005 (UTC) ... and please note that your decision to construe the word "imbecilic" as directed at you is your own. To me it does appear grossly irrational to continue to fail to see the value in that kind of redirect even after an example of this kind has been adduced. Michael Hardy 23:40, 26 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Bessel function questionHi Michael, notwithstanding the interesting discussion above, the main reason I came here: please take a look at my very simple, short question at Talk: Bessel function and fix things if you have a moment. --Chinasaur 19:28, 27 Mar 2005 (UTC) Help at Generalized_continued_fraction?Some anonymous user has disputed something at Generalized_continued_fraction, and I thought you might know enough to help. *shrugs* -Grick 00:11, Mar 29, 2005 (UTC) Faa di Bruno linkDear Michael, the link to the AMS-article was the result of a Google search with the keywords "Faa di Bruno+Formula". There were roughly 500 hits (exactly 556), the said article ranked among the first 30 (I think it is a nice article). Strangely enough, it was impossible to locate that article directly on the homepage www.maa.org. You can find references to that article on the sublinks http://www.maa.org/pubs/monthly%5Fmar02%5Ftoc.html and http://www.maa.org/pubs/monthly_toc_archives.html. By the way, it seems quite unusual (why is it the case here?) that the full AMS-article is accessible online (in general for copyright reasons only article abstracts are made available). Another way to find AMS articles is to search on www.findarticles.com. See for example http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3742 and the articles for march 2002: http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3742/is_200203 (the Faa di Bruno article is in vol. 109, nr. 3). Addendum: There seems to be (unfortunately) no systematic way of searching for an AMS-article in pdf-format. For example the same volume 109, nr. 3 contains an article by Sam Northshield named "Associativity of the Secant Method" which can in fact be located as pdf-file under http://www.maa.org/news/monthly246-257.pdf (note that a google search failed to spot this link). The reason why these two articles (exceptionally) appear (as full articles) here may be that they have the "distinguished status" as price-winning articles and therefore were made accessible as full text. See http://www.maa.org/features/080503_writingprize.html which contains a link to the article by Northshield (which is a dead or obselete link by the way). It also seems that the links on the page www.maa.org are reorganized contemporarily so some links might be unstable or invalid. Help with typing mathematical expressionsHi! Thanks for introducing me to Wikipedia's style guide. I've moved some of the material I thought I was going to introduce to the quantum harmonic oscillator to creation and annihilation operators instead. I'm just wondering if you could direct me to a page where I can learn how to type in mathematical formulas? Preferably something that starts from the very basics. Thank you! HappyCamper 19:25, 2 Apr 2005 (UTC)
Broken redirectsThe definition of a broken redirect is patently obvious. There is nothing it can mean other than a redirect whose target does not exist. If you don't stop yelling and start behaving like a reasonable person, you're never going to convince me of anything. -- Cyrius|✎ 02:24, 7 Apr 2005 (UTC)
I'm sorry you don't seem aware of basic netiquette, which says that writing in all caps is rude and equivalent to yelling. The speedy deletion policy says broken redirects are candidates for speedy deletion, and makes no exceptions for the reason they exist. If you think that is in conflict with another policy, you can attempt to discuss reconciling the two. However, I think your interpretation of that line of the redirect deletion policy is fundamentally wrong. It is intended for redirects to actual articles. As Wikipedia:Redirects for deletion also says:
Even the page you cite as supporting your view says they are candidates for speedy deletion. If you continue trying to impose your view over other people's objections, this is going to enter the dispute resolution process. -- Cyrius|✎ 03:04, 7 Apr 2005 (UTC)
Help needed on the Ethics articleUnfortunately, someone set up an article parallel to our article on Ethics, in violation of Wikipedia policy. That parallel article violated NPOV by acting as a blog for one man's personal views, a person that also happens to be hard-banned user. Please see Wikipedia:Votes_for_deletion/Simple view of ethics and morals MiracleMichael Thank you. I have no idea at all where that estimate came from. An anonymous editor put in some POV Catholic material; someone removed it. So I put it back with a label saying it's how Catholics view the matter, and formatted it appropriately for Wikipedia. But I can't vouch for its content. I'm actually inclined to doubt that the numerical estimate is official Catholic church material. Maybe one Catholic bishop wrote it at some point and so it's just one opinion among many Catholic views. Michael Hardy 23:27, 10 Apr 2005 (UTC) Broken redirectsSpeedy deletion policy states that broken redirects are candidates for speedy deletion. The only exception is if they have a useful history. Your continued ignoring of this fact in favor of such insults as impugning my reading comprehension ability has now resulted in me filing you away as unable to be reasoned with. Congratulations. -- Cyrius|✎ 23:38, 10 Apr 2005 (UTC)
That is exactly what the policy says, except when you try to impose your unilateral changes. -- Cyrius|✎ 00:58, 11 Apr 2005 (UTC)
External linksPerhaps you can help me. When websites are sources, and other external (nort necessarily the same) links are also provided, how are these to be presented: 1 two section, or combined? Vaoverland 23:42, Apr 10, 2005 (UTC) Nation and the Taiwan ArticleHi, I saw you contribute to the nation article, and so I thought you might have an interest in how that term would apply to the Taiwan article. And actually, it looks like it might be outside your normal interest and so all the more, a cooler-headed opinion would be appreciated. The current state is that there are two articles: 1) Republic of China and 2) Taiwan. The ROC article covers the state, which has controversy surrounding it, but its scope is not challenged. There was a recent vote that essentially supported a change in the scope of the article to cover basically the geographical and cultural aspects of the ROC rather than just Taiwan Island, as Taiwan is almost never used to mean the island only anyways. I took a look at the nation article and it looks like from what I can tell, given the self-identification of 90% of ROC citizens as Taiwanese, the existence of Taiwanese cuisine, film, language, common democratic institutions, etc, etc, that it is accurate to simply say that the article is about the Taiwanese nation (even though China disputes the political state), in the same way there was a Jewish nation prior to Israel's establishment after WWII. If you agree or disagree, would you mind joining the discussion at the Taiwan article? Thanks a bunch.--160.39.195.88 05:41, 20 Apr 2005 (UTC)
Reformatting of list of mathematical topicsYou are one of the few tireless contribtutors to the list of mathematical topics. So I wonder if you have any feedback on my revamp proposal of that list, see Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Mathematics. Thanks. Oleg Alexandrov 22:31, 19 Apr 2005 (UTC) Copula (Statistics)I know that copula was inappropriate there, but when I orginally put it there it was too stubby for its own page. I was still new at Wikipedia and if I could do it again I would have made its own page. Statistics is not my area of expertise but I thought that Sklar's Theorem and Copula deserved their place in Wikipedia since I am a personal friend of Abe Sklar. I was shocked that these topics were not covered in Wikipedia. Thank you for expanding on the article and disambiguating for me. — oo64eva (AJ) (U | T | C) @ 04:58, Apr 25, 2005 (UTC) New batch up at Wiki SyntaxHi Michael Hardy, FYI, there's new data up at the Wiki Syntax Project that covers redirects to non-existent targets; (The reason I'm leaving this note on your talk page is that you showed an interest in this problem category during the last batch). -- All the best, Nickj (t) 09:52, 26 Apr 2005 (UTC) Are you interested in being a Bureaucrat?Hi, I am considering nominating you to become a Bureaucrat. The role would involve giving administrator or bureaucrat access to other users following consensus on Wikipedia:Requests for adminship. Although there are currently 18 bureaucrats, it may be helpful to have a few more. If you would accept a nomination, please let me know. Kingturtle 04:27, 27 Apr 2005 (UTC)
I never heard of those before either. I would like to note from my experience with its creator, P0lyglut, that this person is a bit of an unserious troll, and maybe even worse than that (see his edits to G. H. Hardy and greatest mathematicians). I would not mind putting his bipolar coordinates up for deletion. Oleg Alexandrov 04:36, 28 Apr 2005 (UTC) Octopus, octopi.Thanks for correcting me on the "synopses" typo. For some odd reason I can never remember the proper pluralization of words ending with "s." BTW, where is that typo located? addesso 21:28, 28 Apr 2005 (UTC)
Correlation matrix and capital letters for random variablesMy answer to both of your questions regarding nonstandard "correlation", as well as the usage of capital letters for random variables can be found on User_talk:Orderud. --Fredrik Orderud 21:30, 28 Apr 2005 (UTC) Jointly Gaussian and uncorrelated implies independenceAs a statistician, you are probably the right person to extend the Multivariate normal distribution article with the/your fact that (only) jointly Gaussian and uncorrelated implies independence. --Fredrik Orderud 22:02, 28 Apr 2005 (UTC)
expos/nationals debateThere is a major debate going on, and I wondered if you might want to chime in. The debate involves how to deal with franchise moves in baseball. The question is whether Montréal Expos should be its own article or if it should redirect to Washington Nationals. All other instances of franchise moves in MLB redirect the old team name to the new team name, and the history of the franchise is covered within the new team name (for MLB, NBA and NFL examples, see here. Some people are confused and think the Expos and the Nats are different teams. Some people don't want to upset Canadian readers. Indeed, the Washington Nationals are not a new team - the Montreal Expos franchise has moved to Washington, and the old franchise name should redirect to the new franchise name, just like the 20+ instances of this occuring in Wikipedia. For example, Brooklyn Dodger history resides in the Los Angeles Dodgers article. New York Giants history, including the Shot Heard 'Round the World, resides in the San Francisco Giants article. If you have the time, maybe you could chime in on the conversation there, Wikipedia:Votes for deletion/Montréal Expos. Kingturtle 23:16, 28 Apr 2005 (UTC) Thanks for fixing Markov stuff in Kalman filterThanks for correcting the statements of the Markov assumption in the Kalman filter! It's such a perfect example of what conditional independence is all about, I wonder if it's worth mentioning Markov chains on that part of statistical independence? rambling rose, bipolar coordinatewhy did you revert my edits for rambling rose, bipolar coordinate, and Nonfirstorderizability? Xah Lee 07:48, 2005 Apr 30 (UTC)
Uses of trigonometryWhen I read what you've put into this article, I can't help feeling that your trying to tell the reader that the article holds no surprises and will bore him to death, so that he will stop reading after the first paragraph.
Joint Functional Component Command for Network WarfareI'm not sure why you wrote a long (and seemingly angry) note on my talk page about this stub being incomplete, rather than fixing it yourself. It's now fixed. Dave (talk) 16:15, May 6, 2005 (UTC)
Hi Michael. I need some advice and some help. I just ran into the Bolzano-Weierstraß theorem article, and it looks to me that this better be spelled Bolzano-Weierstrass theorem according to English spelling rules. What do you think? If you agree, could you help me delete the redirect at Bolzano-Weierstrass theorem and move Bolzano-Weierstraß theorem on top of it? Thanks. Oleg Alexandrov 21:19, 6 May 2005 (UTC)
TeXHi, Thanks...for the heads-up. -- Cyan 02:03, 12 May 2005 (UTC) Please note...My use of "dictionary definition" style, my not using boldface, and my capitalizing of all important words in a section title, were deliberate. They were not "usual newbie errors." All of the styles and formats I used are correct. They may not conform, but don't say they are not correct. I suggest that it is you who are in need of newbie training. From the Wikipedia Style Manual:
From Wikipedia Edit Summary:
If you wish to correct factual errors or typos, I appreciate the help. Otherwise, take your trivial and gratuitous "corrections" and comments elsewhere. Wikipedia is not a playground for pedants. — J M Rice 21:57, 12 May 2005 (UTC)
Parameter estimationHello Michael - I have it in my mind to put a parameter estimation section in any probability distribution article that does not have it. You know this subject - would you have time to help? PAR 05:37, 15 May 2005 (UTC) Template:Wrongtitle --moved Stevertigo's comment from the user page.You, as a mathie, use it for such a reason, but its use is far more (too IMHO) general. Your argument is one-sided. As for the distinction between P-adic numbers versus p-adic numbers.. Will the title ever be lowercase first? Might be something to ask the m:developers - I dont think it will be the case that lowecase will ever be the default unless there's a way to handle hidden redirects and disambiguation-differentiation between the two. So, in that case the assertion that the title is "wrong" due to "technical limitations" is wrong on both counts. The title is not wrong -- merely capitalized, and the technical limitation: 'automatic capitalization of the first letter' isnt a limitation if its convention and policy. -SV|t 05:37, 18 May 2005 (UTC) merge notice on Contravariant
Squaring the circleWhy did you revert my changes on Squaring the circle? Since you didn't offer a reason i presume it was because the name "Category:Pathological science" startled you. I don't like it, either, but this was the closest i could find. If you have a better category that expresses the idea of many "free spirits" who've invested years in a misguided scientific endeavour, i'd be happy if you could assign it to that one. This article certainly should not only be under Category:pi! — Sebastian (talk) 20:06, 2005 May 20 (UTC)
binary testing questionHi, Michael. I have a question about binary tests. I am familiar with the terms specificity, sensitivity, PPV, and NPV. However, I had never heard of the phrases "Snout" and "Spin", meaning "sensitivity allows you to rule out a diagnosis" while "specificity allows you to rule in a diagnosis". In fact, it seems to me these rules of thumb are just wrong. Yet, they are given on many websites of respected medical places. Here's why they seem wrong to me: Suppose P = population = 1,000,000 a = TP = true positives = 1,000 b = FP = false positives = 1,000 c = FN = false negatives = 0 d = TN = true negatives = 989,000 Now, the sensitivity = a/(a+c) = 1,000/(1,000) = 100%, perfect! while the specificity = d/(b+d) = 989,000/990,000 = 99.8%, almost perfect! and the NPV = d/(c+d) = 989,000/989,000 = 100%, again perfect! Yet, the PPV = a/(a+b) = 1,000/2,000 = 50%, far from perfect, and not very assuring to a patient who receives a positive test result. So, in this case, the "Spin" rule of thumb seems wrong; the specificity is 99.8%, yet if you are a patient and you are told you have a positive test result, you can only be 50% sure that you have the disease, no better than flipping a coin. Obviously, the reason this situation occurs is because the prevalence = (a+c)/(a+b+c+d) = 1,000/1,000,000 = .1% is extremely low. I ask this question because of an article on HIV testing which made the following conclusions: base on the following data: a = 14 b = 1 c = ?? d = ?? a+b+c+d = ~130,000 they concluded that HIV testing was highly accurate in low-prevalence populations. They used the raw false positive rate Raw false positive rate = b/(a+b+c+d) = 1/130,000 and considered it the most important number available. They did report a and b, making it possible to calculate the PPV, but they did not consider this number relevant, nor did they account for the fact that the prevalence was extremely low. As a patient, I would want conclusions based on more than just 15 positive patients. It seems this is a positive population too low to make any real conclusions about. There were other problems with the study, involving whether Western Blot is a very accurate gold standard itself, but that's another issue. Thanks. Revolver 01:18, 8 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Least squaresThanks for catching my gross error. I was sure I read somewhere that linear regression means matching against ax + b and thought at that point: how odd, that is different to the distinction between linear least squares and nonlinear least squares. However, I cannot find now where I read this. Certainly, the Wikipedia article on linear regression makes the point clearly. I did remove your stark warning though, because it does not appear very encyclopaedic to me. I hope that the reader realizes this himself now we are using the quadratic model as an example for linear regression. -- Jitse Niesen 15:41, 9 Jun 2005 (UTC) EpiclesisI noticed your correction in the article epiclesis. I was obviously a bit careless in leaving the sentence as it was after removing the incorrect information. Thank you for correcting my oversight. I am concerned, though, by the message you left on my talk page. I am not sure I would use that particular wording to express myself. In particular, you said:
Without the "formerly in" clause, the sentence was awkward, but not unintelligible. "Absurd" implies that the sentence made no sense, which is not true. Absurd can also be read as an derogatory term. I was more concerned with the edit summary. You said, "(Someone's way of "correcting inaccurate information" (see the edit history) is absurd.)" Was this really necessary? It would have been more helpful if you had described what you actually did, instead of belittling the previous editor for what was actually a simple mistake, probably caused more by lack of sleep than anything else. As it stands, your edit summary helps no one, and is, in my opinion, not the most civil way to communicate information—in fact, it communicates no useful information at all. I would like to point out from the Wikipedia Edit Summary:
I would also point out that your assumption (to change "Latin-Rite Catholic" to "Roman Catholic" thinking that it would include all other churches in communion with Rome) is incorrect. There is a reason for separating Eastern-Rite Catholic from Latin-Rite Catholic. Properly speaking, ER Catholics are not Roman Catholics at all. They are Ruthenian Catholics, Melkite Catholics, Chaldean Catholics, etc. Although "Roman Catholic," as is commonly used in the U.S.A. can refer to all churches in communion with Rome, this is not proper usage; it is perceived by many in the Eastern Catholic communities as at least marginally offensive, thus better avoided. The sentence as you left it did not quite make sense, though the grammar was improved. Would you reconsider how you word your commentary? I hesitate to bring this up at all, but this doesn't seem to be the first time that this issue has come up. Examples are plentiful on this page, not to mention the Bureaucrat vote page. The reason I bring this up is because of a suggestion made on the Wikipedia page on dealing with conflicts. InFairness Scalar fieldHi Michael. Would you please comment a bit at Talk:Scalar to what I wrote there? I find the recent edits of MarSch of that article rather confusing, and from what I see you too. Thanks. Oleg Alexandrov 03:36, 15 Jun 2005 (UTC) Thank you for uploading Image:Pythagorean.png. Its copyright status is unclear, so it may have to be deleted. Please leave a note on the image page about the source of the image. Thank you. Oh and btw, you really need to archive this talk page and shorten it to contain somewhere around last 10-20 topics... its almost impossible to preview my comment because of the huge page size. --Spundun 07:25, 15 Jun 2005 (UTC)
ListsHi Michael. You are doing an admirable job at creating lists, the most recent one being the list of set theory topics. I hope you continue on doing that, as it is a good thing to have the articles listed. But I am just curious, what is the motivation behind that? What do you think lists provide that categories don't? Maybe you will get me more interested in creating them. :) Oleg Alexandrov 05:42, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Michael Hardy 22:50, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)
RABot... edittingAre you having fun editting User:RABot/Requested articles/Social Sciences and Philosophy? That is a local, not presently updated copy of Wikipedia:Requested articles/Social Sciences and Philosophy. It was used in the testing and development of the RABot script. Dragons flight 20:34, Jun 22, 2005 (UTC) Hi Mike, there is an insane discussion at Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject Mathematics about statistics; maybe you can comment. linas 00:45, 23 Jun 2005 (UTC)
I admit my field is group theory, but I have done some actuarial work; and it was true then. Septentrionalis 01:28, 23 Jun 2005 (UTC) 45th Parallel ?There are supposedly markers in both cities. One is at Golden Valley Road and Wirth Parkway [3]. The other is just north of Roselawn along Cleveland. [4]. Draw a segment between those two points and I think you will see they are exactly east and west of each other. Wahkeenah 10:24, 26 Jun 2005 (UTC) Second Vatican CouncilI'm afraid your lowercasing in Second Vatican Council was incorrect.
Statistics SuggestionsDoes it make sense to create a definition for the Beta-Binomial? I am often confused when I see the word overdispersed used in the statistics literature. I'll see it in reference to starting points for an MCMC calculation, and to describe a distribution. Is it just a "wider" distribution than the one specified by the model or data? There is no entry for Generalized Estimating Equations. There is no entry for Data Augmentation, should there be one that points to imputation(statistics).
G TheoryJust thought I'd let you know that I have begun working on changing the links of the page redirects that were created when Ed Poor redirected the page. Jtkiefer July 6, 2005 01:11 (UTC) Question about the correctness of MatrixDear Michael Hardy: Why the category of Householder transformation is Matrices and QR decomposition is Matrix_theory? Are they correct? Are there really differences between Matrices and Matrix theory? Because I am not very interested about that, you don't need to answer me detailly. I don't want to waste your time. Just let me know that you have done and I will check them to know. Thank you
Defective (Titles)My apologies if I have misunderstood the titling convention. If you move the pages, I'll repair the links (there are quite a lot of them and I would not want to cause you work to fix all my mistakes. -David91 8 July 2005 05:27 (UTC)
Talk:MarcionismYour input is requested at Talk:Marcionism. From the history looks like you added the statement that the Ethiopian church claims to be the only one free of Marcionism and you referenced a website, but it looks like the website has changed and that claim is no longer present. Something to make you smileHey Michael, I finally got around to fiddling with the etymology for iridescence, and have a funny story I'd like to lay out for you. I think that you must have hurriedly checked the etymology and assumed that stem was a definition of ιρις, rather than the part of speech. Don't worry, you're still one of the smartest people I know on WP :). I'm betting you were using the OED as that's the dictionary I found where the stem is confusing. Although there is a botanical definition for iris, stem is a red herring. --Chinasaur 20:00, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
RP speechRP speech is non-rhotic, meaning that the written 'r' is pronounced as a soft 'r', unless followed by a vowel. What do you mean by "a soft 'r'"? Non-rhotic speech is called non-rhotic because the 'r' is not pronounced at all except when a vowel sound follows it. "Cart" does not have the sound of 'r' (as in "ring") in non-rhotic dialects. Michael Hardy 23:21, 16 July 2005 (UTC) Three R sounds (possibly four/five if you include French and German uses) exist. A soft R, as in car (which is not pronounced 'ca'), a middle R (as in 'ring'), and a hard R (rolled, mainly used in Gaelic accents, but you do have it crop into southern and northern accents, usually as a formality). New Englanders often cut the R out of a word (hence 'ma'ket place'), whereas in English a 'motor car' is pronounced as such, with the soft are applying. It is not as simple as cutting out the R entirely, nor is it a middle R, or even a rolled R. Nick Kerr 01:30, 17 July 2005 (GMT) ×Hi Michael, it seams you like (?) to replace e.g. "*" with "×" etc. and it seams you do this manually. I hope this simple cut'n'paste tool ( mozilla js ) may be helpful for you: best regards, wolfgang Wzwz 21:08, 17 July 2005 (UTC) StatisticsI deleted article from "academic disciplines" because I think it's better in a subcategory. But no biggie. Maurreen 00:19, 18 July 2005 (UTC)
Spectrum (dab)Hi Michael. I saw your comments about the spectrum (disambiguation) page, and I'm inclined to agree. You can see I was rather aimlessly talking to User:Smack about it, but I lost interest when he decided that the FFT was about as notable to the sigproc community as your average handheld calculator. He's done some good work on the page as you say, but it needs repair. Smack's done some decent work in making a lot of uses of spectrum point to spectrum (disambiguation), but he doesn't research thoroughly enough and he could put much better, properly dab'd links in. I decided I ought not to prowl his contribution history to do the job better, and it'd be hugely tedious too. From Augean Stable I don't understand what you mean in your edit summary. While I'm on the topic, there's problems with spectral density and frequency spectrum meaning the same thing, saying different things, and frequency spectrum really just being discrete fourier transform. I've been meaning to get around to this, but was reluctant to discuss it with Smack after he came up with the handheld calculator analogy. There's not much need for discussion of a merge in a dry, technical area though, so perhaps I should walk the walk rather talk the talk... -Splash 22:06, 18 July 2005 (UTC) Taking your name in vainWhen you looked at Democratic peace theory some time ago, you made some comments on the PoV nature of one Of Ultramarine's edits. He came up on RfC [[5]]. I commented at some length on his behavior on DPT and cited your comments on his PoV. I thought it only courteous to let you know. Septentrionalis 00:33, 21 July 2005 (UTC) Current on VfD. Obviously original research, but I'd like your comment in the VfD discussion. Looks like patent nonsense to me. Dpbsmith (talk) 14:07, 22 July 2005 (UTC) Re: anathemaThanks for your comments on my User Talk page. You are quite right of course and your tidy-up is much better than what I was doing. I should say that I did not originate the ambiguation in question and was just trying to sot is out. Gaius Cornelius P Prime PrimeHello Michael ... I notice that you changed the name of the P Prime Prime article to "P prime prime" (lower case) . Are you planning to change C Plus Plus likewise? (Just kidding -- but I did model the name on C Plus Plus, which the naming conventions (technical restrictions) cite as an example.) For such a proper noun, shouldn't the initial caps remain, according to the naming conventions? --r.e.s. 23:23, 22 July 2005 (UTC)
Hello. Sorry to take a while to attend to this. To me "P prime prime" does not seem like a proper noun at all. The "P" should be capital since it's case-sensitive mathematical notation. But why the "prime"? "C Plus Plus", on the other hand, may well qualify as a proper noun. Note that in Wikipedia we write "Smith's theorem", "Smith's law", "Smith's principle", "Smith's criterion", "Smith's axiom", "Smith's hypothesis", "Smith's equation", etc., etc., with a lower-case initial letter. Michael Hardy 21:04, 3 August 2005 (UTC)
Page refresh issuesHi, I noticed from the history on WP:RfD that you seemed to have had a problem with getting a page refreshed properly. Do you know about: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/wiki.phtml?title=PAGENAME&action=purge which will often clear these kinds of problems? (Of course, replace the PAGENAME with whatever's appropriate - "User_talk:Michael_Hardy" or whatever.) Doesn't always work (e.g. it's no use with the "template Y has been changed to no longer reference page X but pages which use Y still show up on what-links-here for X" bug), but it helps. Noel (talk) 14:18, 23 July 2005 (UTC) 0.999... equals 1I'm sorry, but I don't see how this is possible. They're two different numbers with two different numerical designations. --[[User:Merovingian|Hi, there. In case you didn't know, when you add content to talk pages and Wikipedia pages that have open discussion, you should sign your posts by typing four tildes ( ~~~~ ) at the end of your comment. On many keyboards, the tilde is entered by holding the Shift key, and pressing the key with the tilde pictured. You may also click on the signature button located above the edit window. This will automatically insert a signature with your name and the time you posted the comment. This information is useful because other editors will be able to tell who said what, and when. Thank you! -->]] (t) (c) 21:26, July 24, 2005 (UTC)
Hi Michael. I know you contributed to the list of mathematical topics since prehistoric times, :) so I have a question. Would you mind if I remove all the red links from there? Some of them are a bunch of tiling articles which got deleted and never removed, some others are articles which were not completed for a long time. More importantly, if the red links are out, my bot will have an easier time noticing when those articles get created, since they will be posted to the list of changes to the math articles. I talked to Jitse about this, see User talk:Jitse Niesen/goim#List of mathematical topics issues and he agrees. So, what do you think? Oleg Alexandrov 00:00, 25 July 2005 (UTC) Enlisted jobs copyvio...I noticed you corrected the capitalization of this article. A google test(pick a random phrase, search in quotes on google) quickly identifies it as a copyvio. Please check for copyvios with such oddly-titled articles. Thanks for all your contributions to Wikipedia! JesseW 22:07, 5 August 2005 (UTC) Category CombinatoricsHi Michael, I was wondering if there was some sub-category we could create to hold all of the articles that deal with stirling numbers and binomial coeffs (e.g. Vandermonde's identity. It would be nice to have these in a specific place, rather than in the generic Category:Combinatorics. What do you think? what would that cat be called? linas 16:13, 7 August 2005 (UTC) New TeX user...Michael, thanks for a small TeX lesson. I beat my laziness and take a look in reference. As a sw developer having experience with languages like Perl I have found it funny to use it right way (speed / average speed section). I also went through some of your pages and I wonder how you can manage all this?! Finally I want to say that I think I understand people who do not like your enhancements in "their" articles.
I do not like too much "academical" approach to Wikipedia too and do prefer more human aspects if do not interfere with the purpose.
One of the basic human aspects is "not to be perfect" what as I believe do not interfere much with purpose of Wikipedia in general.
This aspect also supports diversity, which I love ( perfect things make up very poor subset of possible). Anyway, I appreciate any enhancements you do in "my" edits, because I do not take them as "my" in fact... Thanks again, Michal Eltwarg 19:53, 13 August 2005 (UTC)
I don't understand the point above at all, since it is completely non-specific. Could you please give some examples? Sometimes I don't like people's edits to article's I've started, but I know they're not "my" articles. Do you mean that correcting spelling or punctuation is not "human" enough? Or changing an erroneous assertion to a correct one is not "human" enough? The purpose of Wikipedia is to make information available. If you can point out some edit of mine that was does not support that purpose, please do. Certainly you can find some errors among my many edits, but I doubt that's what you're trying to say. Also, no one has expressed to me that they regard any article as "theirs" and dislike my edits for that reason. Has someone indicated that to you? If so, I wonder why they don't say that to me. Michael Hardy 01:03, 15 August 2005 (UTC) Ok, Michael, answers follow in the same order as question marks occured in paragraph above:
People often feel like they are attacked by such change or comment. However, often there is just a kind-hearted human being wanting to help you on the other side :-) Using monospace text for math formulasHi Michael ... When/if you get a chance, please take a look at lambda calculus. After some hesitation, I recently changed a large amount of "formula text" to monospaced, because it is so much more legible. But considering your recent edits on bijective numeration, I would like to know your opinions on when not to use monospace (specifically, using <tt></tt>). If you compare the old and new versions of the lambda calculus article, I think you'll see what I mean about much better legibility. It seems to me that math formulas are a case where monospace is a lot more likely to be a judicious choice. What do you think?--r.e.s. (Talk) 08:49:22, 2005-08-18 (UTC) Probability Distribution standardsHi Michael - I saw your edit of the Zeta distribution article and was about to revert it, with examples of other discrete distributions as evidence, and I see that there is a serious lack of consistency in the discrete distribution articles with regard to PMF and CMF notation. I have made a first cut at some standards for probability distribution articles into the Wikipedia:WikiProject Probability page. Can we get a consensus on this? I would like to start standardizing the discrete probability distribution articles, at least the PMF and CMF names, and method of handling parameters. MarkSweep has suggested the talk page for this project Wikipedia talk:WikiProject_Probability as a good place to discuss these standards. PAR 13:55, 18 August 2005 (UTC) Continuous FunctionsHello I recall your correcting an error of mine a while ago and have noticed many other interesting contributions, so I wonder if you would care to chime in on Continuous functions? A chap User:JahJah changed the page to say that rational functions are continuous and it's going back and forth between our talk pages. Regards Pdn 17:55, 18 August 2005 (UTC) Thnks. I must yield on this; you say that 1/x on the real line excluding zero is continuous. But the statement that JahJah made that all rational functions are continuous seems to assume that the "user" first determine all the zeros of the denominator and then exclude them from the domain. This concept could be worded in some way like:" All rational functions are continuous on the domain that excludes the zeros of their denominators." Cumbersome. Finally, consider this passage from the page on continuous functions: "An example of a discontinuous function is the function f defined by f(x) = 1 if x > 0, f(x) = 0 if x ≤ 0. Pick for instance ε = 1/2. There is no δ-neighborhood around x=0 that will force all the f(x) values to be within ε of f(0). Intuitively we can think of this type of discontinuity as a sudden jump in function values." According to the rest of the discussion, if we excise the point x=0 then the function becomes continuous. OK. Surprising, but you guys in math have your reasons. Thanks again Pdn 04:08, 19 August 2005 (UTC)
And yes, the function you describe is continuous except at 0. That doesn't seem so "surprising" to me. Michael Hardy 20:48, 19 August 2005 (UTC) Well, I always thought that rational functions had poles at the zeros (roots) of the denominator. I guess it is simpler to excise those points, but the poles get trampled. Pdn 00:57, 20 August 2005 (UTC) It is counter-productive to nullify what is known about poles (and perhaps branch cuts) by excising them. I suggest that "Continuous Functions" be renamed "Continuous Functions on the Real Domain" or the like and people be referred to what I suppose must exist in this august encyclopedia about poles, Laurent expansions, etc. Pdn 05:26, 30 August 2005 (UTC) Random assistanceThanks for the pointer on style / capitalization in headings in Teller-Ulam design. I'm trying to reduce the trail of minor repairs people have to follow me around and do after I add content; it's been a lot easier to learn how to add content than it has been to pick up all the clues on how to add it cleanly and entirely correctly. Polite pointers much appreciated. Georgewilliamherbert 07:28, 20 August 2005 (UTC) ThanksThanks for the style tips. Supten 04:23, 22 August 2005 (UTC) Hi, couldyou read & comment on notation question at Talk:Sigma-algebra ? linas 13:48, 26 August 2005 (UTC) SqlboyAre you in any way connected to User:Sqlboy, I see that you both have the same contents on the user page. :-) bogdan | Talk 16:45, 30 August 2005 (UTC)
Comment on user pageIn regards to your comment, you're dead on about the second point - I do have a habit of doing that, and I shouldn't. However, I'm not sure which new article you're referring to with your first point:
The only article I've created recently was Oxandrolone, which was correct with respect to that point (the only possible problem being my capitalisation of Oxandrin, which even so is probably acceptable as it's a registered trademark). GeeJo (t) (c) 01:25, September 1, 2005 (UTC)
Wikipedia article samplingSince you seem to be the resident statistics expert (and my statistics knowledge is ancient history), I was wondering if you could answer a question that I had. I've seen several people on their user pages do samples of the Wikipedia by hittin the Random article link and then tabulating the types of articles that they found. I remember enough about statistics to know that a sample size of of 10-20 articles can't be representative. How many articles would it take (assuming the Random article link is really random) to get a representative sample from the Wikipedia? BlankVerse ∅ 16:15, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
I'm curious. Can you tell me what was the first name of the "Sklar" immortalized by this theorem regarding the cupola? I've always seem him (her?) cited in finance textbooks and the like simply as "A. Sklar." What does the A. stand for? --Christofurio 02:47, September 3, 2005 (UTC)
There was an Abe Sklar in my class (PhD) at Caltech, 1960, in math. (I was a TA in Math but remember only "Abe Sklar"). see also [6] Looks like he is named or likes to be called "Abe" Pdn 05:09, 13 September 2005 (UTC)
I left this comment, and would appreciate your comment on where you think I'm mistaken in the conclusion I've reached over the last couple of months that everything left by this particular editor can by default be assumed to be of negative value (I'm happy to elaborate, if you like). -- Egil 01:39, 12 September 2005 (UTC) Degrees of freedom (statistics) isn't very understandable (to a non-statistician)Hi. I've been looking at the page on degrees of freedom, and, as a non-statistician (trying to read a little about stats), I find the page a bit confusing. For example, the sentence: "The probability distributions of residuals are often parametrized by these numbers of degrees of freedom." I have difficulty understanding this: How does one parametrized (parameterize?) a probability distribution? Does it involve altering the equation? Do probability distributions come in a form such that degrees of freedom are a variable or constant in the equation? For that matter, what are these "numbers of degrees of freedom" anyway? How are they determined for a particular experiment? Perhaps an introductory explanation, explaining what degrees of freedom are, how they are derived, and how they are used (in a very broad, and non-statistical way) would be helpful. This could lead into the detailed statistical treatment of the subject, while making the page more accessible to non-statisticians. Some examples of degrees of freedom being used in distributions would also be quite helpful, I think. Thanks
Could you take a look at...Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Algebraical quantity and Algebraical quantity? Dpbsmith (talk) 00:09, 16 September 2005 (UTC) Oh, and Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Ioh and Ioh, while you're at it? Dpbsmith (talk) 00:14, 16 September 2005 (UTC)
Cerebellar hemispheresDr. Hardy, I just saw your recent participation in Cerebellum. You edited the sentence,
and changed the link for "hemisphere," adding the following rather uncharitable edit summary: It is absurd to link to hemisphere and expect it to be an article on cerebral hemispheres.[7] I'm not certain who it was that originally placed the link, but it seems perfectly sensible to have linked to hemisphere; the intention must have been to define the term "hemisphere" for those who might be unfamiliar with it. In the following clause, mention is made that this hemispheric division of the cerebellum is similar to that seen in the cerebrum; readers interested in the cerebrum can follow that link. In fact, it will be confusing for a lay person to have the first link go to cerebral hemispheres—the impression is given that the cerebellar hemispheres being spoken of in the article refer to the cerebral hemispheres, when this is certainly not the case. The target for hemisphere is a disambiguation page that needs cleaning up; I'll do that and revert the edit. I thought your remaining edits were very helpful. Kindest regards—encephalonὲγκέφαλον 19:18, 16 September 2005 (UTC)
I was hasty. I see lots of cases where someone links to something like "field" that would obviously have to be a disambiguation page, when they mean it in a specific technical sense, and thought at first that this was such a case. Michael Hardy 20:20, 16 September 2005 (UTC)
CapitalsHello. Please note that in External links, the "l should not be capitalized; see Wikipedia:Manual of Style on section headings. The first letter of a section heading is capitalized; the others are not unless there is a reason to do so. I've fixed this in vernal equinox. Michael Hardy 17:56, 21 September 2005 (UTC)
Bell number(s)Actually,I was convinced the move was non-controversial when I found Euler number. The request was not in proper form, and it looked to me like another case in which someone was calling for admin assistance for something he could in fact do himself. I will make sure that WP:RM indicates that it is controversial, and join the discussion. Septentrionalis 19:26, 21 September 2005 (UTC) Feel like commenting? Dpbsmith (talk) 19:55, 21 September 2005 (UTC) Hi Michael. The article on inferential statistics should be merged into statistical inference. I don't know how to do it. Can you help ? Bo Jacoby 07:22, 22 September 2005 (UTC)
Tautology and Back-formatioini edited the wrong article. thanks! --x1987x 22:27, 23 September 2005 (UTC) Hi and helphow do you archive your talk page? thanks jonah
Math punctuationI understand your concerns, but my concern is that the period is very close to \cdot, which is confusing when thrown at the end of a formula. The typographical features of web browsers are rather lacking.—Kbolino 00:03, 1 October 2005 (UTC) Redirects, Radii Of CurvatureHiya Mike, I'm a newbie Wikipedian, so some stuff I'm probably off base, but a lot I think I'm on target. > (Please don't make internal links look like external I'm not trying to pass off internal links as external, but rather doing an "anchor redirect", which--in itself--is an example: [[Help:Redirect#A_redirect_to_an_anchor Anchor Redirects]] just redirects to /Help:Redirect, but [http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Help:Redirect#A_redirect_to_an_anchor] redirects right to /Help:Redirect#A_redirect_to_an_anchor Look at the "Contents" box: Those are all anchor redirects using URLs! P=) > This is not "radius of curvature" in GENERAL, Oh yes, I'm well aware of the different arcradii. P=) Capital letters in martingaleHi, this is the reply to your "Hello and welcome to Wikipedia. Please note that by Wikipedia conventions outlines in Wikipedia:Manual of Style, a section heading should say "General mathematical definition" with lower-case initial "m" and d rather than capital letters. I changed this in martingale. Happy editing. Michael Hardy 00:12, 4 December 2005 (UTC)" I am a new contributor. I thank for your suggestions about capital letters in the sections titles. Since the Wikipedia server was experiencing troubles during my composition (it warned me), I saved the text several times. I did not understand that I was creating some confusion in the history of the paper, in that way. Moreover, in order to avoid to lose what I wrote, I copied the text to clipboard, and then pasted it in the wikipedia compose-box. That's why you had to edit the capital letters more than once. Finally, I got it and now the "General mathematical definition" section should work. I have to add a some remark about my addons in the discussion page, I suppose. Thank you again Mauro gala.martin |