• @[email protected]
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    8311 months ago

    I looked it up on Wikipedia.

    In mathematics, the Dedekind numbers are a rapidly growing sequence of integers named after Richard Dedekind, who defined them in 1897. The Dedekind number M(n) is the number of monotone boolean functions of n variables. Equivalently, it is the number of antichains of subsets of an n-element set, the number of elements in a free distributive lattice with n generators, and one more than the number of abstract simplicial complexes on a set with n elements.

    Pretty simple to understand. I mean, I understand it, for sure. Totally.

      • @[email protected]
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        1911 months ago

        I understood most of the words, just the ones that I didn’t made the rest incomprehensible garbledygoop

    • @[email protected]
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      11 months ago

      Good work everyone. I stay more with the stereo boolean variables, but the news about those lattices being free now is really great stuff. We really did something here

      • Pirky
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        611 months ago

        Lol, I thought that at first, but I’m pretty sure it’s in how much larger the next number is to the last one.

        • Cosmicomical
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          210 months ago

          Yes that’s what it means, what is rapidly growing is the value of the next number in the sequence, not the amount of numbers we discovered!