Wetfish Online
Discussion Forums => Shitpost Central => Topic started by: SourCandy on May 02, 2020, 06:48:44 am
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This will be a simulation of coral mine.
In order to make it interesting and not just some spam post:
Every user has to think of some mathematical problem or physics exercise and other one has to solve it quoting a new math or physics problem.
Moreover, try to find more difficult problems/exercises than it was before and try to solve it using your brains not a computer :P
Remember, here you getting 100 corals for every post you make, here, it comes a challenge with it.
Rules simple:
1. Do not post anything here, except the solution of the last quote and new math/physics exercise.
2. If the answer was right, author of the problem has to tip 200 corals to a user that solved it. So it is also an encouragement to make difficult exercises :P
3. Users that will be participating, once in a while, will randomly receive random sums of corals (from 100 to 1k) from Sour_Candy.
SO, LET'S MAKE SOME CORALS FELLAS: Four gentlemen have put off four identical hats in the locker room. What is the probability that on leaving at least one of them will get back his own hat ?
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This will be a simulation of coral mine.
In order to make it interesting and not just some spam post:
Every user has to think of some mathematical problem or physics exercise and other one has to solve it quoting a new math or physics problem.
Moreover, try to find more difficult problems/exercises than it was before and try to solve it using your brains not a computer :P
Remember, here you getting 100 corals for every post you make, here, it comes a challenge with it.
Rules simple:
1. Do not post anything here, except the solution of the last quote and new math/physics exercise.
2. If the answer was right, author of the problem has to tip 200 corals to a user that solved it. So it is also an encouragement to make difficult exercises :P
3. Users that will be participating, once in a while, will randomly receive random sums of corals (from 100 to 1k) from Sour_Candy.
SO, LET'S MAKE SOME CORALS FELLAS: Four gentlemen have put off four identical hats in the locker room. What is the probability that on leaving at least one of them will get back his own hat ?
given this is a locker room and clothes in a locker room are placed within metal boxes with locks, i'm going to say 1, assuming no one forgets their combination.
where's my coral
also new problem:
(https://wiki.wetfish.net/upload/d83898a4-1d57-5ed9-dc94-60b26a0e738b.png)
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This will be a simulation of coral mine.
In order to make it interesting and not just some spam post:
Every user has to think of some mathematical problem or physics exercise and other one has to solve it quoting a new math or physics problem.
Moreover, try to find more difficult problems/exercises than it was before and try to solve it using your brains not a computer :P
Remember, here you getting 100 corals for every post you make, here, it comes a challenge with it.
Rules simple:
1. Do not post anything here, except the solution of the last quote and new math/physics exercise.
2. If the answer was right, author of the problem has to tip 200 corals to a user that solved it. So it is also an encouragement to make difficult exercises :P
3. Users that will be participating, once in a while, will randomly receive random sums of corals (from 100 to 1k) from Sour_Candy.
SO, LET'S MAKE SOME CORALS FELLAS: Four gentlemen have put off four identical hats in the locker room. What is the probability that on leaving at least one of them will get back his own hat ?
given this is a locker room and clothes in a locker room are placed within metal boxes with locks, i'm going to say 1, assuming no one forgets their combination.
where's my coral
also new problem:
(https://wiki.wetfish.net/upload/d83898a4-1d57-5ed9-dc94-60b26a0e738b.png)
3
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This will be a simulation of coral mine.
In order to make it interesting and not just some spam post:
Every user has to think of some mathematical problem or physics exercise and other one has to solve it quoting a new math or physics problem.
Moreover, try to find more difficult problems/exercises than it was before and try to solve it using your brains not a computer :P
Remember, here you getting 100 corals for every post you make, here, it comes a challenge with it.
Rules simple:
1. Do not post anything here, except the solution of the last quote and new math/physics exercise.
2. If the answer was right, author of the problem has to tip 200 corals to a user that solved it. So it is also an encouragement to make difficult exercises :P
3. Users that will be participating, once in a while, will randomly receive random sums of corals (from 100 to 1k) from Sour_Candy.
SO, LET'S MAKE SOME CORALS FELLAS: Four gentlemen have put off four identical hats in the locker room. What is the probability that on leaving at least one of them will get back his own hat ?
given this is a locker room and clothes in a locker room are placed within metal boxes with locks, i'm going to say 1, assuming no one forgets their combination.
where's my coral
also new problem:
(https://wiki.wetfish.net/upload/d83898a4-1d57-5ed9-dc94-60b26a0e738b.png)
3
>:(
wrong, didn't even have units, smh
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Woodneko: wrong, the correct answer: 62.5%
Since Ozmiander didn't left a new math problem, the latest one going to be:
How come in free fall you feel weightless even though gravity is pulling down on you? (ignore air resistance when answering this question).
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ITT SourCandy tricks us into doing his homework
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Woodneko: wrong, the correct answer: 62.5%
Since Ozmiander didn't left a new math problem, the latest one going to be:
How come in free fall you feel weightless even though gravity is pulling down on you? (ignore air resistance when answering this question).
f=ma, you feel no force because you have reached terminal velocity and are no longer accelerating.
Find the MGF for x given the joint PDF f(xy)=e^(-y), 0<x<1, 0<y
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whats a MGF, is a most goodest faggot? because its me. the answer is me.
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whats a MGF, is a most goodest faggot? because its me. the answer is me.
correct
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Hooray! Here's my puzzle
4 6 21
5 8 36
6 3 20
8 7 56
5 10 44
4 4 X
what is x?
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science question: What portion of events are non repeating/irreproducible