I'm getting the hang of your dementia!kouriichi said:your taking my words the wrong way.SakSak said:A contradiction in terms.kouriichi said:Because its value is not a value.
Show me Pi anything. Precisely Pi anything.You put numbers to objects, and it will make some sense.
Write down the number lim (x->0) x
Show me i apples.
Either you must reject all these as numbers, or accept 0 as a number.
So the binary system that your computer operates on is pointless. Gotcha.0's value is that of nothing. So it filling in the absences of something is pointless, because what its filling in would most likely be what? Nothing xD
So being able to differentiate between
1000
and
1
is pointless. Gotcha.
Again, define what a number is, according to you.
1000 is not 0.
0 is a place holder. using it is more or less pointless.
Im not saying it shouldent exist, im saying its not a number.
binary code doesnt run off just 0's. its one long string of 1's and 0's.
0 itself is pointless.
A number is something even slightly tangable. number is something that has value, describes quantity, and can be assigned to something.
1 is a number. there can be 1 cat.
2 is a number. there can be 2 cats.
294631946 is a number. Because there can be 294631946 cats.
Sure thats alot of cats, but the number can be assigned to something and have it be tangable.
You cannot put 0 to any object, because that object would not exist. 0 cats would just be nothing. because the act of putting 0 with cats nullifys the cat all together. It would just be 0. a place holder.
Like the underscore.
Is it a letter or number? no, its a place holder for a letter or number to be inserted.
So...if nobody dies in an accident, you omit the "deaths" column of a casualty report on the grounds of it being irrelevant?