e^(i Pi)+1=0 said:
As I understand it, 0/0 is indeterminate, not undefined. Unless all my math books and teachers have been wrong.
fbs7, I don't understand your notation.
Pardon me, English is not my first language. In my native language we call 0/0 undefined, as opposed to a well-defined value. Whatever it is, it's 0/0...
If that's anything, that is. I'm more comfortable thinking that 0/0 is neither undefined nor indeterminate.. it just doesn't exist. But then again I have never been comfortable with i either.
Let me ask the other way around... what is the true nature of 0/0? What "indeterminate" means in mathematical terms? Which equation/expression defines indeterminate?
I mean, when one says 0 * x = 0, that just means a multiplication and it holds true for any x \in R. It doesn't imply that x = 0/0, because from 0 * x = 0 one obtains ( 0 * x ) / 0 = 0 / 0, therefore (0/0) * x = 0/0... not x = 0/0.
So I could think as "indeterminate" meaning that if z = f(x) / g(x), and f(0) = 0 and g(0) = 0, then the value of z, if it exists, depends on the functions f and g. But once the functions are known, z is known too... so it's not that indeterminate, it just depends on f and g.
Or, let me ask even another way around. If
F = [{0} -> {0}] is the set of all continuous functions f such that f(0) = 0, and then I define
0/0 as being the set of all limits lim
x->0 f(x)/g(x) calculated per the l'Hopital rule, then certainly there is a mapping between
F x F and
0/0.
That way, although I still think that 0/0 doesn't exist (in the same way that i doesn't exist), I can say that if I know f and g, then I can define 0/0 = f(0)/g(0), I can say that it is a member of
0/0, it is defined through that mapping, and for a given (f,g) it has one specific, well-defined value in R. Doesn't seem very indeterminate.
As you see, the whole thing is just very confusing to me.