because that’s just what decimal notation means. And since the limit of the series of partial sums of that infinite series is 1, that means the total sum of that infinite series represented by 0.999... is also 1, so 0.999... = 1. — Pfhorrest
the ... means the limit is taken. IE, .999... = 1 — fdrake
Yes but 'limit' is not the same as 'equals'. — EnPassant
Actually it does, that's why they use the equals sign. It's the entire essence of calculus. — Pantagruel
Another argument, more or less following similar thinking, is whether a number could be found between 0.999... and 1.000... (like the mean).
If no such number can be found, then we might reasonably say they're one and the same. — jorndoe
What is 1/3 in decimal? — Michael
So, how many numbers are there? — InPitzotl
But does anybody know? Intuitively yes, we can see that the limit is 1. But limit is not the same as equals. The argument is subtle. What is being said is 'After an infinity of 9s'. That is what I am suspicious about. I'm not sure what 'an infinity of' means. Or if it is a coherent statement.Then you don't know what the symbols mean and should read the OP's article! — fdrake
But does anybody know? — EnPassant
Intuitively yes, we can see that the limit is 1.
0.999... IS the limit of the sequence {0.9,0.99,0.999,...}, which IS 1. — fdrake
But if infinity is not a number how can you have an infinity "of"? — EnPassant
What is 1/3 in decimal? — Michael
I have read through it. These are mathematical expressions and as such they are symbols. They represent infinity. But mathematicians were aware of these issues when formulating the calculus and they cautioned against saying 'equals'. They said we should say 'Tends towards the limit'If you don't understand these issues, you should read through jorndoe's document. If you have any questions regarding its content, ask in thread and I will try and address them for you. — fdrake
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