That’s advanced calculus, and my guess is, those notations were made up to give rise to a new field in math, which has more to do with computers than math, so I don’t think that counts.
Computation theory, but that’s not math as in regular math. It’s just a fancy way of expressing how things inside a computer work, so we can actually make better versions of it. You just have to express it somehow in math terms.
It’s like saying engineers use math all the time. No, they don’t. We use simple aproximations of what is actually happening to dumb down the problem, cuz, it does the job nicely and no one will notice the difference between what we used, a simple aproximation, and the real thing, a full blown advanced calculus model of the thing we’re working on.
I mean, coding does have to do with math, it’s usually just different notation. i = i + 1 in math notation is just i := i + 1.
That’s advanced calculus, and my guess is, those notations were made up to give rise to a new field in math, which has more to do with computers than math, so I don’t think that counts.
What discipline do you think Allan Turing and Von Neumann were in?
Computation theory, but that’s not math as in regular math. It’s just a fancy way of expressing how things inside a computer work, so we can actually make better versions of it. You just have to express it somehow in math terms.
It’s like saying engineers use math all the time. No, they don’t. We use simple aproximations of what is actually happening to dumb down the problem, cuz, it does the job nicely and no one will notice the difference between what we used, a simple aproximation, and the real thing, a full blown advanced calculus model of the thing we’re working on.
You mean they were not mathematics department professors?
Where?