What I find fascinating about the shared prompt isn’t just the result, but the visible thinking process. Math papers usually skip all the messy parts and just present the polished proof. But here you get something…
One thing this discussion made me realize is that "thinking hard" might not be a single mode of thinking. In grad school, I had what I'd call the classic version. I stayed up all night mentally working on a topology…
I own the original Exploring Mathematics with Your Computer(Turbo Pascal version). It’s an excellent introduction to algorithms for people coming from a mathematics background. Really happy to see it revived in Python.
What I find fascinating about the shared prompt isn’t just the result, but the visible thinking process. Math papers usually skip all the messy parts and just present the polished proof. But here you get something…
One thing this discussion made me realize is that "thinking hard" might not be a single mode of thinking. In grad school, I had what I'd call the classic version. I stayed up all night mentally working on a topology…
I own the original Exploring Mathematics with Your Computer(Turbo Pascal version). It’s an excellent introduction to algorithms for people coming from a mathematics background. Really happy to see it revived in Python.