OneJoeZee said:You have to look at the proof in relation to the steps. Telling me that the expanded equation is equal to zero, which is ok, doesn't explain why step 4(in particular) and the following steps that result in 2 = 1 are false.
annoyingrob said:(a+b)(a-b) = b(a-b) does not mean (a+b) = b. What you are doing is dividing the first equation by zero (a-b) to give yourself the second equation, which is mathematically incorrect.
And THAT's why this proof is false.
It didn't take abstract algebra in university for nothing
OneJoeZee said:You have to remember we're talking about a proof that isn't even a true proof. It's fabricated to show the error in dividing by zero and what can go wrong. Why is the proof 2=1 wrong, not why is step 3 wrong.
Step 4 isn't 0=0. Step 4 is (a+b)=b. So your answer has to reflect why Step 4[ (a+b)=b ] and it's result 2=1 is incorrect. This is why Rob's anwer is correct for this 'proof' that 2=1 by showing the error of division by zero... even though both of your answers are mathematically sound.
Nothing divided by nothing is actually Error:icon_biggSupraDerk said:Absolutely nothing and even if you try... 0/0 = 0... nothing divided by nothing is NOTHING... so that is why ever step beyond it is wrong
ValgeKotkas said:Nothing divided by nothing is actually Error:icon_bigg
You can't divide by zero, period. Why? Because nothing CAN'T go into something. How many times does 0 go into 50? How 'bout 100? Infinite? Same answer, it can't.SupraDerk said:Use your your brain and not a calculator or computer...
If I start out with nothing... and I try to add nothing to it, divide it by nothing, multiply it with nothing or subtract nothing from it... what is my end result?
Oh damn... nothing.
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You get errors and what not in simulations and computations by dividing by zero, because that'll result in a "not a number" (it'll be a flag that something went wrong) so that a computer can finish running a computation and be able to output an error