That seems to be more a matter of grammar and semantics (and perhaps your personal method of communication/notation) than of mathematics. That kind of 'distinction' just muddies the waters IMO.Will Hunting said:They are indistinguishable in principle, however, they are distinguishable in practice.
In other words, if a question asked you only to find the roots, without mention of the zeroes, or vice versa, there ARE different ways to express your answer.
For roots, you would write:
The roots are, x = a, b, ..., n for a p'nomial with n distinct roots
For zeroes, you would write, simply:
The zeroes are a, b, c, ..., n (no x =)
So, it can be seen that roots can be considered values of x giving P(x) = 0, whereas zeroes are just values.
Other than this, though, they are identical in function, purpose and idea.
Absolutely, dude, and I was in no way oblivious to this when I made my addition to the thread. However, you are wrong to dissuade consideration of it at all. How does its being a syntactical issue milden, in any way, its importance to mathematics? Trivial as it may be, it too has its role to play and, as such, should not be overlooked.KFunk said:That seems to be more a matter of grammar and semantics (and perhaps your personal method of communication/notation) than of mathematics
Your call, man, but, again, this doesn't attenuate its importance.KFunk said:That kind of 'distinction' just muddies the waters IMO
Yeah, I'll pay that (EDIT: but only just ). It was mainly the statement "So, it can be seen that roots can be considered values of x giving P(x) = 0, whereas zeroes are just values." which I kinda objected to. Just be careful with gospel statements when people are unsure of concepts. [as you can probably tell I don't agree with the distinction you made ]Will Hunting said:Absolutely, dude, and I was in no way oblivious to this when I made my addition to the thread. However, you are wrong to dissuade consideration of it at all. How does its being a syntactical issue milden, in any way, its importance to mathematics? Trivial as it may be, it too has its role to play and, as such, should not be overlooked.
This is actually not really the correct distinction.Will Hunting said:For roots, you would write:
The roots are, x = a, b, ..., n for a p'nomial with n distinct roots
For zeroes, you would write, simply:
The zeroes are a, b, c, ..., n (no x =)
So, it can be seen that roots can be considered values of x giving P(x) = 0, whereas zeroes are just values.