x = 0.999...
10x = 9.999... — Michael
How do you know it's infinity and not, say, an octillion? — InPitzotl
What is the limit of the series {0.9,0.99,0.999,...}? Call this x.
What does the symbol "0.999..." represent? Call this y.
Is x=y ? — fdrake
You answered only half of the question... the half about your knowing that it's not any nameable number. What about the other half... how do you know it's infinite?"How do you know it's infinity and not, say, an octillion?" -- InPitzotl
Because I know it is not any nameable number. — EnPassant
You can say 0.999...= 1 if by that you mean the limit of 0.999... — EnPassant
Wrote a guide here. It's essentially LateX if you're familiar with it, though without lots of the standard packages. — fdrake
There isn't. What you're looking for is the infinity symbol above the Sigma. — Kenosha Kid
That is exactly how it is meant. That is what 0.999... means. — fdrake
Just a comment about posting math material, symbols, equations, etc. I doubt if anyone here uses it, but MathType is very easy to use and is WYSIWYG rather than coding for each symbol. — jgill
You just accepted that 0.999... is the limit of {0.9,0.99,0.999,...}, and equal to 1 — fdrake
Try this: .999... is not a number because it has a indefinite extension. — Metaphysician Undercover
is the limit of the sequence of partial sums — fdrake
.999... is obviously not a number. It is a numeral. 1, 2, 3, ..., are obviously not numbers. They are numerals. It's a difference that makes a difference. I'm surprised you need to have that pointed out to you. — tim wood
How so? What else would it be?Whether or not .999...qualifies as a numeral is a matter of interpretation. — Metaphysician Undercover
As a numeral, it's nothing in itself but a sign of something. But a sign of what? Well, the people who define these things have told us. — tim wood
Try this: .999... is not a number because it has a indefinite extension. A number is an object and an object cannot have an indefinite extension. — Metaphysician Undercover
Whether or not .999...qualifies as a numeral is a matter of interpretation. What I meant, as you seem to have difficulty in understanding, is that it does not signify a number — Metaphysician Undercover
.999... is obviously not a number. It is a numeral. — tim wood
Ghosts of departed Quantities — Berkeley
Another possible source of confusion could be the Archimedean properties[23][24][25]: neither ∞ nor infinitesimals[26] are real numbers[27][28].
What a silly thing to say. .999, eighteen, XVI, and .999... all represent numbers.What matters to the present discussion is that .999... does not represent a number. Nor does .111... represent a number, and that's the problem with the op. — Metaphysician Undercover
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