Dungeon Numbers - Numberphile

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  • čas přidán 28. 07. 2020
  • Featuring Neil Sloane from the OEIS.
    Check out Brilliant (get 20% off their premium service): brilliant.org/numberphile (sponsor)... More links & stuff in full description below ↓↓↓
    Part 2: • Dungeon Numbers (extra...
    Neil Sloane is the founder of the The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. Visit it here: oeis.org
    More Neil Sloane on Numberphile: bit.ly/Sloane_Numberphile
    Numberphile is supported by the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute (MSRI): bit.ly/MSRINumberphile
    We are also supported by Science Sandbox, a Simons Foundation initiative dedicated to engaging everyone with the process of science. www.simonsfoundation.org/outr...
    And support from Math For America - www.mathforamerica.org/
    NUMBERPHILE
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    Videos by Brady Haran
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 618

  • @homegronhomestead8640
    @homegronhomestead8640 Před 3 lety +1527

    You should switch from calling it 'dungeons' to 'BASEments'

  • @PTFVBVB
    @PTFVBVB Před 3 lety +354

    There's something about Neil's voice that has a "teacher that really cares about your learning" quality to it

    • @sillysausage4549
      @sillysausage4549 Před 3 lety +5

      Strange. I find his corrupted English accent incredibly annoying. Sure he's a nice bloke, but the American pronounciations really grate on me.

    • @Liveitlarge247
      @Liveitlarge247 Před 3 lety +9

      He has a wicked T-shirt on too

    • @leif1075
      @leif1075 Před 3 lety +5

      For me a soothing sensual therapeutic quality!!!

    • @matthewmcbride2893
      @matthewmcbride2893 Před 3 lety +2

      I completely agree. He seems earnest.

    • @Bronco541
      @Bronco541 Před 3 lety +4

      @@sillysausage4549 I like how his accent is somewhere between English and American, its unique (somewhat, I'm sure there's plenty of people who move around a lot with similar accents). But more than that; he's enthusiastic and passionate about what he teaches.

  • @otakuribo
    @otakuribo Před 3 lety +168

    There's a valuable treasure awaiting brave adventurers at the bottom of this dungeon, and his name is Neil Sloane

  • @ncot_tech
    @ncot_tech Před 3 lety +683

    New mathematical terms here - “pretty big”, “gigantic” and “really tiny”.

    • @skebess
      @skebess Před 3 lety +31

      We sometimes use this kind of terminology. Others include: almost everywhere, almost surely, almost never, always never, etc...

    • @duskyrc1373
      @duskyrc1373 Před 3 lety +16

      And all three terms can apply to the same number, depending on context

    • @andrewboyd9948
      @andrewboyd9948 Před 3 lety +2

      @@duskyrc1373 bruh

    • @BoundlessxArts
      @BoundlessxArts Před 3 lety +7

      @@skebess "70% of the time it works every time"

    • @JobvanderZwan
      @JobvanderZwan Před 3 lety +1

      Nothing will ever top "the tooth number" though

  • @w4yland3r27
    @w4yland3r27 Před 3 lety +308

    If you listen to this without watching, it's like a madman just rattling off numbers.

    • @kasperrosenlund4187
      @kasperrosenlund4187 Před 3 lety +25

      That would describe a lot of Numberphile videos :D

    • @Vgamer311
      @Vgamer311 Před 3 lety +31

      It’s like that if you’re watching too.

    • @andybaldman
      @andybaldman Před 3 lety

      @@Vgamer311 lol!

    • @hayuseen6683
      @hayuseen6683 Před 3 lety +5

      It stopped making sense after 40 seconds in, after that it was Numbers Station ramblings.

    • @not2tired
      @not2tired Před rokem

      This also works if you watch without listening

  • @abogmus8904
    @abogmus8904 Před 3 lety +557

    Neil sounds like a Half Life scientist

  • @Henrix1998
    @Henrix1998 Před 3 lety +453

    How about
    ...
    12
    11
    10
    11
    12
    ...

    • @patrickhanlon932
      @patrickhanlon932 Před 3 lety +79

      It all depends on how you parenthesize it.

    • @jeremydavis3631
      @jeremydavis3631 Před 3 lety +22

      EDIT: This was my first impression. I've made another comment after thinking about it a bit more.
      Given that the size of a tower is unbounded and the size of a dungeon is asymptotically bounded (so that we only need two nested logarithms to get it to a friendly size), the combination should diverge to infinity, just slightly more slowly than the tower alone would. Calculating the terms of the sequence would be quite a bit harder, though.

    • @ShevkoMore
      @ShevkoMore Před 3 lety +42

      ...............
      12 12..
      11 11..
      10 10 10..
      11 11 11..
      12 12 12..
      ...................

    • @jeremydavis3631
      @jeremydavis3631 Před 3 lety +6

      Oh, wait, I think my first impression was wrong. As Patrick Hanlon said, it depends on how you parenthesize it. If the last operation we do (assuming it makes any sense to talk about a "last" operation in an infinite sequence) is part of the tower, the result should be unbounded, since we're raising a large number to an unbounded power. If the last thing we do is part of the dungeon, it'll drag us back to the asymptote, and so it *might* be bounded. Proving that it actually *is* bounded for any given parenthesization strategy doesn't seem easy, though.

    • @henryirvine7964
      @henryirvine7964 Před 3 lety

      no

  • @Adam-ds1ik
    @Adam-ds1ik Před 3 lety +72

    Props to the editors and animators. This was pretty dense but their help made it understandable

  • @unnamed7225
    @unnamed7225 Před 3 lety +78

    2:22
    Took me a while to figure out that 11 was actually an equal sign rotated 270 degrees.
    because who says 90 degrees these days

    • @ChadTanker
      @ChadTanker Před 3 lety +4

      every body does say 90 degrees because its shorter

    • @unnamed7225
      @unnamed7225 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ChadTanker Then what should everybody say for negative 90 degrees?

    • @cubixthree3495
      @cubixthree3495 Před 3 lety +8

      @@unnamed7225 negative 90 degrees

    • @unnamed7225
      @unnamed7225 Před 3 lety +1

      @@cubixthree3495 ;-;

    • @wolfiy
      @wolfiy Před 3 lety +2

      @@cubixthree3495 3pi/2

  • @BrianShelfPartTwo
    @BrianShelfPartTwo Před 3 lety +139

    Every time I see Mr Sloane's videos I can't take my eyes off his folders. Please can I ask, what are "Fat Struts" ? Thanks for the content y'all.

  • @captdeadfool5685
    @captdeadfool5685 Před 3 lety +41

    I got no idea wtf you're talking about but i like how you write stuffs on that brown papers

  • @LeoStaley
    @LeoStaley Před 3 lety +60

    If number explanations at the online encyclopedia of integer sequences (oeis) were like this, I would spend more time exploring it.

  • @JSLing-vv5go
    @JSLing-vv5go Před 3 lety +155

    Sloane is great. I love integer sequences.

  • @sbmathsyt5306
    @sbmathsyt5306 Před 3 lety +56

    Never heard of this but that is what is so great about this channel, always bringing fascinating new concepts to the viewers attention. This has certainly inspired me to look more into different bases.

  • @efa666
    @efa666 Před 3 lety +184

    Why does this guys office look like the inside of a circus tent?

    • @lukefreeman828
      @lukefreeman828 Před 3 lety +38

      You mean "why do circus tents style themselves on this guys office?"

    • @HitHard1008
      @HitHard1008 Před 3 lety +1

      @@lukefreeman828 stop there.

    • @earthwormscrawl
      @earthwormscrawl Před 3 lety +16

      Is it an office raised to the power of a circus tent, or a circus tent in base office?

    • @Eric4372
      @Eric4372 Před 3 lety +1

      It’s the Whataburger wallpaper 😂

    • @omikronweapon
      @omikronweapon Před 3 lety +3

      actually, this is the fírst time I realised he's just in a room with stripey wallpaper. My mind always interpreted it as him being in a tent, at some mathematical excavation xD I never questioned it...

  • @dejremi8190
    @dejremi8190 Před 3 lety +96

    If you love Neil sloane's numberphile videos, clap your hands (clap clap)

  • @adizmal
    @adizmal Před 3 lety +79

    When you cross that threshold of having no idea what's going on, but there's still more than 10 minutes left in the video...

    • @GerSHAK
      @GerSHAK Před 3 lety +1

      Hahaha :D

    • @Terri_MacKay
      @Terri_MacKay Před 3 lety +1

      I got to the point where I was beginning to catch on...then he started talking about logs, and I was completely lost again.
      I am terrible at math, but find it fascinating. I understand a lot of the videos on this channel, but some just go right over my head.

    • @penfold1992
      @penfold1992 Před 3 lety +2

      And then he starts referring to dollars!

    • @Terri_MacKay
      @Terri_MacKay Před 3 lety +3

      @@penfold1992 Yeah...what was that about?? Is "dollars" a math term I don't know about?? 🤔😂

    • @-johnny-deep-
      @-johnny-deep- Před 3 lety +1

      @@penfold1992 - Yeah, that was odd. I guess he thought it would help people understand. I was understanding great until he temporarily threw me by saying "dollars" :-)

  • @FandangoJepZ
    @FandangoJepZ Před 3 lety +13

    I love how I was so fooled by the first dungeon sequence. I compete in a lot of math competitions so I got very full of myself, and it was obvious the increment was always increasing by 1 and then it went like NOPE

    • @lawrencecalablaster568
      @lawrencecalablaster568 Před rokem +2

      It’s so strange how it fits exactly up to 65 & then exponentially increases.

    • @19Szabolcs91
      @19Szabolcs91 Před rokem +1

      @@lawrencecalablaster568 Sure is, but it has to do with how the difference in the sequence gets to be a 2-digit number, breaking the pattern. Similarly, the reason all 4 sequences started with 10, 11, 13, 16, 20 comes down to "'1" being the first digit.

  • @dustysparks
    @dustysparks Před 3 lety +35

    So the "magic jump" in these sequences happens when the second units number increases from 1 to 2 (ie "10 sub x" to "20 sub x")

    • @rosiefay7283
      @rosiefay7283 Před 3 lety +7

      Which shows just how fundamentally bogus this whole setup is. It confuses numbers with decimal representations.

    • @menachemsalomon
      @menachemsalomon Před 3 lety +6

      @@rosiefay7283 No, I don't think that's so. Firstly, when we're discussing different bases, only the first step is decimal. But Dustin is saying that the jump happens when the second place (not the units, the n^0 place, but one to the left, the n^1 place) goes to 2.

    • @Martykun36
      @Martykun36 Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@rosiefay7283 not really? it just means you have to settle on some "global base" first, and in this case it was 10. You can do the same process for any other base.

  • @noidea2568
    @noidea2568 Před 3 lety +15

    At first I was like "wait, this is a really simple pattern, 10, 11, 13, 16, 20... that just means that I have to add 1 the first time, 2 the second time, 3 the third time and so on and so on".
    But then I saw the numbers at 6:13. Oh boy was I wrong. This pattern is not as simple as I thought.

    • @martind2520
      @martind2520 Před 3 lety

      The third sequence does actually follow that pattern, so you weren't completely wrong.

    • @KnakuanaRka
      @KnakuanaRka Před 3 lety +2

      Yeah, I think it starts like that, but I believe it stops working once you get beyond 20.

    • @-johnny-deep-
      @-johnny-deep- Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah. Surprised that wasn't pointed out in the video.

  • @GhilesNc
    @GhilesNc Před 3 lety +42

    7:01 : You forgot the paper change music !

    • @david_ga8490
      @david_ga8490 Před 3 lety +1

      Yep

    • @bobbyyie1310
      @bobbyyie1310 Před 3 lety

      @@david_ga8490 you don't want to attract headless creatures and such whilst in a dungeon.

  • @awayname5008
    @awayname5008 Před 3 lety +39

    You can´t just leave on a cliffhanger like that.

  • @Playmaker6174
    @Playmaker6174 Před 3 lety +32

    Yesss, more Neil Sloane and numbers :)

  • @nilsragnar1347
    @nilsragnar1347 Před 3 lety +3

    Neil Sloane might be my favorite guest on Numberphile, glad to have him back!

  • @Decessus117
    @Decessus117 Před 3 lety +2

    At first I was surprised by the growth of these sequences. However, after some thought, I think there's an intuition to be had here. When interpreting a number in a base (e.g., interpreting 153 in base 10), you *are* performing an exponentiation in some sense, because you're interpreting it as 1x10^2 + 5x10^1 + 3x10^0.
    But the trick here is that, despite interpreting the numbers in all these different bases, *we are restricting ourselves to the 10 regular digits!* So unlike in, say, hexadecimal, where the number after 99 is 9A, here the number after 99 is still 100. As a result, the instant that one of these sequences increments its second term, or reaches a 3rd term, it starts to grow by a factor of the base (and the base has been increasing for some time). This helps it very quickly reach a fourth term, and thus grow by the cube of the base, etc. After that it's clear to see why it explodes.
    If we allowed as many digits as bases (e.g., 8, 9, A, B, ...), the terms would just grow by one each time and the sequence would stick to the triangular numbers.

  • @Hyo9000
    @Hyo9000 Před 3 lety +5

    I love Neil Sloane, he’s becoming one of my favorite Numberphile hosts

  • @azhakabad4229
    @azhakabad4229 Před 3 lety +3

    All amazing stuff is here!

  • @JovianCloudfarmer
    @JovianCloudfarmer Před 3 lety +5

    This does still end up pretty base 10-centric, even though it plays with many different bases. I looked a little into how it ends up when you keep it all in binary and only convert to base 10 at the very end, and it was pretty interesting, since for example, the 4th step is no longer 10_11_12_13, it's 10_11_100_101. The introduction of a third digit in the base so quickly means that you start to square numbers in the base conversion process sooner, so the numbers start to grow bigger sooner. However, since it's powers of 2 and not powers of 10, I suspect that the size of the growth rate changes will be smaller, so it's very possible that base 10 will catch up in terms of number size after a number of steps.
    An example (using bottom-up parentheses):
    Base 10, 7th step: 10_11_12_13_14_15_16 = 31
    Base 2, 7th step: 10_11_100_101_110_111_1000 = A 68-digit binary number, 193825204350418564226 in base 10

  • @linggamusroji227
    @linggamusroji227 Před 3 lety +9

    Your shirt looks great, we both love Jimi Hendrix

  • @CoolAsFreya
    @CoolAsFreya Před 3 lety +6

    I can't help but grin at the absurdity of the sequences that mathematicians come up with

  • @Npvsp
    @Npvsp Před 3 lety +1

    His voice and tone are so relaxing and mesmerising!!

  • @empty5013
    @empty5013 Před 3 lety

    love neil's videos every time, this man is the integer wizard

  • @ericschuster2680
    @ericschuster2680 Před 3 lety +34

    Is this the guy who knows the plot and character names of Avatar? What a legend!

  • @InigoSJ
    @InigoSJ Před 3 lety +1

    He's back! Thaaaanks so much, more ASMR for me to sleep.

  • @Joe-wj7ku
    @Joe-wj7ku Před 3 lety +1

    I've wondered about the order of indeces since I was in high school. I'm so grateful I've found a video about it!

  • @carpediemcotidiem
    @carpediemcotidiem Před 3 lety

    Love this guy's passion for his subject

  • @teslapenguin1
    @teslapenguin1 Před 3 lety +3

    I’ve heard about sub used for counting variables (a1, a2, a3, etc), where a1 is term 1, a2 for term 2, etc. but I haven’t heard sub used this way.

  • @cassa995
    @cassa995 Před 3 lety +31

    This video just shows how to get the sequence 10 11 13 16 20 from various different methods

    • @Meuszik
      @Meuszik Před 3 lety +2

      AND how using those methods produce radically different divergences _after_ 20.

  • @ChavvyChannel
    @ChavvyChannel Před 3 lety +1

    With every episode is even more and more effort for the animations

  • @B1GB1RDB4G3L
    @B1GB1RDB4G3L Před 3 lety

    Omg I love videos with Neil

  • @vmp916
    @vmp916 Před 3 lety

    Every year, my local university in NJ has a festival that features lots of school clubs, departments, and occasionally artists, researchers, vendors etc. I first met Neil at one of these special days. He had a table set up with sequences as puzzles where you had to figure out the next number and what the sequence was. If you were interested, he would talk to you about more sequences and the OEIS. I met him again another year. To my knowledge he is a regular attendee. Obviously they didn’t have any festival day this year. It’s a treat getting to see him talk about interesting sequences in video form regardless.

  • @OKRASSnaky
    @OKRASSnaky Před 3 lety +26

    Ok, neat to follow until... Wait, what? 1.1? a non-integer base?! :o

    • @Jordan-zk2wd
      @Jordan-zk2wd Před 3 lety +3

      (you can even have imaginary and complex bases actually ^ ^)

    • @MrAlRats
      @MrAlRats Před 3 lety +7

      There are numeral systems that use complex numbers as their base. For example, the Quater-imaginary numeral system which uses the imaginary number 2i as its base. It is able to almost uniquely represent every complex number using only the digits 0, 1, 2, and 3. No minus sign is used for negative numbers in this numeral system, as they have a different representation from their positive counterparts.

  • @Lightning_Lance
    @Lightning_Lance Před 3 lety +2

    This is a delicious irony because the word dungeon comes from donjon, which was the main tower in a castle.

  • @manuelsaavedraabarca9318

    Sloane's videos are my favorites

  • @businessguide6219
    @businessguide6219 Před 3 lety

    Officially, you're one of my favorite CZcamsrs out here!

  • @Stemma3
    @Stemma3 Před 3 lety +1

    I barely understand the theory but watching Sloane having fun with secuences is awesome.

  • @ThePaci93
    @ThePaci93 Před 3 lety

    I love this channel

  • @thomasbui6175
    @thomasbui6175 Před 3 lety +1

    I noticed at the first way of bracketing, it is just +1,+2,+3,+4,etc. But top down it changes after the +4. That's a cool pattern.

  • @rangerocket9453
    @rangerocket9453 Před 2 lety +1

    3:57 - 4:00 I died of laughter
    Neil: plus 2 **awkward pause** uh - au - um dollars
    Me: *[Breaks into Laughter]*

  • @jodfrut771
    @jodfrut771 Před 3 lety +1

    Neil is always great

  • @originalveghead
    @originalveghead Před 3 lety

    I enjoyed this video way more than I probably should have.

  • @MrAlFuture
    @MrAlFuture Před 3 lety

    I really enjoy Neil's insights and enthusiasm. I could totally imagine Sam Neil playing Neil Sloane in the bio pic of his life :)

  • @BryanWLepore
    @BryanWLepore Před 3 lety

    A visit with Neil
    Sloane is a great way to lift our mathematical spirits out of the dungeons, for sure.

  • @blackwings2885
    @blackwings2885 Před 3 lety

    Wow beautiful...
    Thanks old man math is truly amazing...

  • @dieselguitar1440
    @dieselguitar1440 Před 3 lety

    Wow, that's amazing! I thought that it was just a boring quadratic at first, and would've passed it off as such if it weren't for this video showing the cases past only a few iterations. What's going on here (I think), is that the bottom up approach starts getting "faster" with more digits, and the top down approach starts getting faster once to 10+X turns into 20+X.

  • @gamespotlive3673
    @gamespotlive3673 Před 3 lety

    This is really cool. Like a entirely new way of thinking about numbers.

  • @tal4726
    @tal4726 Před 2 lety

    When you're watching a bunch of videos on Dungeons and Dragons and your recommendations get a little weird.
    Hi, I wasn't expecting this but this channel seems fun

  • @a.a7907
    @a.a7907 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for your video.
    If you can share a complete course about what is electricity and how to manipulate it. What are some useful devices that every system must have. How to make projects out of these devices. This would be great thing to have.

  • @michakuczynski2987
    @michakuczynski2987 Před 3 lety

    Neil Sloane is by far my favourite guest on Numberphile :)

  • @esotericVideos
    @esotericVideos Před 3 lety +2

    It's interesting watching numberphile and getting a sense of the different mathematicians personalities. Some of them really like working towards some theory, some like real world implications, some like "giving it a go", and some like Klein bottles. But Neil Sloane more than anything seems to just like to play with numbers. There doesn't seem to need to be any greater meaning than saying "what if we play with weird rule X with these numbers". It makes sense why such a personality would create the OEIS.

    • @mostlyokay
      @mostlyokay Před 3 lety +1

      I can't help but get a little dumbfounded by videos where he appears precisely because of that. In my mind here is no point in just finding number sequences without any connection to anything else in maths. But of course, time and time again results that were thought to be purely abstract and disjointed from other fields of maths have proven to be just the opposite.

  • @SolomonUcko
    @SolomonUcko Před 3 lety +1

    5:26 This relies on converting to decimal before reinterpreting it in the target base, the sequence would presumably be different if calculated using another base.

  • @LunchboxGaming
    @LunchboxGaming Před 3 lety +3

    5:00 Is it just a coincidence that if you add the right most digits of the descending numbers to the top number you get the end number. (not a math whiz)

    • @n0t10c
      @n0t10c Před 3 lety +1

      I was just coming here to post this

    • @SgtSupaman
      @SgtSupaman Před 3 lety

      No, it isn't a coincidence, because the left digit is a one, which means it is just equal to whatever the base is while the right digit is equal to itself, so you are adding the base + right digit.
      Calculating bases (which essentially means converting from whatever base into base 10) looks like this x^y*a + x^(y+1)*b + x^(y+2)*c + ... (where x is the base, y=0 because you are starting from the first position left of the decimal, and [a,b,c,...]=whatever value is in that position). It is the same thing that you learn as a child when you say a number like 13790 has a 1 in the 'ten thousands' place, a 3 in the 'thousands' place, a 7 in the 'hundreds' place, a 9 in the 'tens' place, and a 0 in the 'ones' place. That means that the number is equal to 10^0*0+10^1*9+10^2*7+10^3*3+10^4*1 (or 0+90+700+3000+10000).

    • @LunchboxGaming
      @LunchboxGaming Před 3 lety

      @@SgtSupaman Word...

  • @TyTheRegularMan
    @TyTheRegularMan Před 2 lety +1

    It's fascinating that all these sequences start with the same exact five numbers before diverging.

  • @Xonatron
    @Xonatron Před 3 lety +1

    5:56 - great visual animation here!

  • @akshayshah483
    @akshayshah483 Před 3 lety

    Good collection of books in background

  • @bdtv463
    @bdtv463 Před 3 lety +1

    Dont forget to place torches when you dig that deep

  • @ChukapiMagnetar
    @ChukapiMagnetar Před 3 lety +1

    9:54
    Brady and Neil got different answers...
    Which really emphasizes how math can be more slippery than metal on ice

    • @thedystopyansociety
      @thedystopyansociety Před 3 lety

      27 seems to be correct in this case. Drove me a bit mad trying to figure out how they arrived at 28 in the graphic.

  • @frogandspanner
    @frogandspanner Před 3 lety

    It's good to see I am not alone in my filing system, especially the heap of books (One of my heaps at home became unstable, collapsed, and broke a table!)
    I extend the heap system thus:
    1) Place anything incoming on one of the heaps on my desk
    2) When needed, search for the item in the heap and, when finished with it return it to the top of the heap.
    3) When the heaps become too tall to see over
    a) Take off the top half
    b) scoop off the bottom half into the bin
    c) Return the top half.
    In that way the communication from the Vice Chancellor progresses at a steady pace to the bottom of the heap and to the destination it ultimately deserves.

  • @JamesSpeiser
    @JamesSpeiser Před 3 lety

    COOL CONCEPT!

  • @benitorossi1076
    @benitorossi1076 Před 3 lety +2

    Good video👍👍

  • @albinoasesino
    @albinoasesino Před 3 lety +1

    7:00 "...natural way to make a dungeon. If you give me a bit of paper I'll show you."
    Taken out of context, it would sound like Neil is trying to get fundings for this esoteric long staircase just going up,
    another even longer coming down, and one more leading nowhere just for show.

  • @sm64guy28
    @sm64guy28 Před 2 lety

    There are two kinds of numberphile videos, either « the next number in the sequence is really big » or the « we still don’t know if the next number in the sequence exists, we’ve checked up to numbers that are xxx digits long »

  • @aaroncarsonart
    @aaroncarsonart Před 3 lety

    10:02 I am delighted that the first five numbers of all 4 sequences are 10, 11, 13, 16, 20. I'm also appreciating that for two of the sequences the differences of sequential elements continue to be the natural numbers for a while longer.

  • @bojko4260
    @bojko4260 Před 3 lety

    This is very interesting 👍

  • @williamcollins4049
    @williamcollins4049 Před 3 lety

    Best use of the brown paper yet.

  • @tinnnyz
    @tinnnyz Před 3 lety

    interesting, thankyou

  • @WRSomsky
    @WRSomsky Před 3 lety

    One oddity w/ a "base computation" (a sub b) is that 'a' *isn't* really a numerical value, but a character string. If you do a top-down, you're constantly having these "represent in base ten" conversions.

  • @Zheunchain
    @Zheunchain Před 3 lety +16

    There seems to be a mistake on the brown paper at 9:53
    Neil skipped 19 in base 14 and went straight to 19 base 13. the result should be 28 not 27.

    • @GenericInternetter
      @GenericInternetter Před 3 lety +1

      he also made a mistake in the introduction, where he did 12*5 instead of 12^5

    • @vladislav_sidorenko
      @vladislav_sidorenko Před 3 lety +1

      @@GenericInternetter That is not a mistake. (a^b)^c = a^(b*c).

  • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
    @lawrencedoliveiro9104 Před 3 lety +3

    10:41 So towers are clearly made out of timber, since you can take them apart log by log. ∗Ahem∗

  • @Naokarma
    @Naokarma Před 3 lety

    To fix the ambiguity of the towering numbers, this is why we need the triangle of power, which replaces exponents, logs, and roots with a single notation, and shows no ambiguity for things like this, as well as more clearly showing the relationship between the 3 notations.
    For those who don't know what this notation is, 3Blue1Brown did a fantastic video on it, and I highly recommend anyone watch it.

  • @dozenazer1811
    @dozenazer1811 Před 3 lety +10

    ♂dungeon masters ♂

  • @Endureth
    @Endureth Před 3 lety +1

    Quickest I've ever gotten lost on a Numberphile video!

  • @sharcc2511
    @sharcc2511 Před 3 lety

    This video taught me how to count in bases higher than base 10, despite that not being it's main goal.

  • @SquirrelASMR
    @SquirrelASMR Před 2 lety +1

    Can u get more of this guy and OEIS and Amazing graphs?

  • @digitig
    @digitig Před 2 lety

    “Single digits don’t change.”
    I’d count ceasing to exist in some cases a “change”!

  • @nutsnproud6932
    @nutsnproud6932 Před 3 lety

    I wish Bill was my maths teacher. Thanks for the video.

  • @unnamed7225
    @unnamed7225 Před 3 lety +1

    I realized that when you did the example for top to bottom and showed the sequence, I noticed something...
    I am just commenting right after seeing it so I don't know if you mentioned it in the video but...
    The sequence is 10, 11, 13, 16, 20, 25, 31, 38...
    I noticed the sequence is 10, then 10+1, then 10+2, 10+3...

  • @davidgillies620
    @davidgillies620 Před 3 lety

    The first sequence is A121263 in the OEIS.
    In Mathematica: define the rebase function, rebase[v_] :=
    Join[Drop[v, -2], {FromDigits[IntegerDigits[v[[-2]]], Last[v]]}] Then define the dungeon number function to apply this recursively to a list of numbers: dun[n_] := First[Nest[rebase, Range[10, 9 + n], n - 1]]. Now make a table: dun[#] & /@ Range[20] which gives {10, 11, 13, 16, 20, 25, 31, 38, 46, 55, 65, 87, 135, 239, 463, 943, 1967, 4143, 8751, 18479}.

  • @maverator
    @maverator Před 3 lety

    It’s like watching Fry and the Professor.

  • @3manthing
    @3manthing Před 3 lety

    I really love his shirt.

  • @gurrrn1102
    @gurrrn1102 Před 3 lety

    The first few minutes of this video were as if Fermat had found an elaborate way to generate the triangular numbers.

  • @Vgamer311
    @Vgamer311 Před 3 lety

    I don’t think this was addressed (or I just missed it) but in the sequence
    10
    9
    8
    7...
    With parentheses starting at the top, it’s not even possible to have an infinite sequence because before long the number being operated on will contain digits not defined in the base being converted to. It’s like saying 5 base 2.

  • @notavailable8130
    @notavailable8130 Před 3 lety

    these things just blow my mind that someone was just sitting around and said hey we have been doing this counting up thing...lets go down?

  • @organicpumpkin2147
    @organicpumpkin2147 Před 3 lety +2

    "Dungeon of Bases"
    sounds like a cool name

  • @arkishchakraborty3787
    @arkishchakraborty3787 Před 3 lety

    Hoping its a series of videos

  • @joedeshon
    @joedeshon Před 3 lety +1

    Great video, as usual. But I missed the requisite elevator music during the paper change at 7:01.

  • @The_Feedy
    @The_Feedy Před 3 lety

    Neil would make a great dungeon master

  • @Redditard
    @Redditard Před 3 lety

    went over my head like an aeroplane

  • @glum_hippo
    @glum_hippo Před 3 lety

    One of my favorite contributors is Neil Sloane

  • @MarkusBHZ
    @MarkusBHZ Před 3 lety

    I just love his Hendrix tshirt! Is there anything more psychedelic than mathematics?!