Wikipedia:Reference desk/Archives/Mathematics/2024 July 26

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July 26

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I joined the X and Y axes together. What Wikipedia page already mentions the concept?

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I had / have this fairly rather long blabbersome brilliant idea. My question is since there is no way that I, with a rather low IQ, could come up with something "new", then my idea certainly must be merely a rehash of some ideas already mentioned on several Wikipedia pages, in fact probably just a sentence on just one page. But which one(s)? Thanks. Jidanni (talk) 04:56, 26 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Your page is cumbersome to follow, but if I'm correct in interpreting it, you are essentially proposing the use of a pairing function or Hilbert curve. It is not possible to continuously reduce dimension in this manner (more precisely, 1D and 2D space are not homeomorphic). It would help if you would more rigorously formulate the function you are proposing rather than merely using examples.--Jasper Deng (talk) 06:22, 26 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Wikipedia defines "pairing function" only for natural numbers, but below I use the term for (not necessarily unique) functions wrapping up two values (not necessarily integers) into a single one of the same type.
Letting   stand for the unit interval   the Hilbert curve can be described as a function   Input one number   output   a pair of numbers. This function is surjective, which implies that there exists an inverse pairing function   Being an inverse means that when   we have   Function   is also continuous, but it is not injective. Many output pairs are reached several times; for example,   So the inverse is not unique.
Numbers in   can be written in base 2; for example,     and   This expansion is not unique:   We can view these binary expansions as infinite sequences   The function   given by   interprets a binary expansion as a real number. This function   is continuous and surjective, just like function   before, so it has an inverse. But, as before, function   is not injective, so the inverse is not unique. However, by convention, it has a "canonical" inverse: other than   the only possible expansion of   in the domain of   avoid sequences ending in an infinite stream of  s.
Now, using   we can define a bicontinuous pairing function   such that
 
This means that we can give a "canonical" definition for   by using   and its canonical inverse:
 
The function   can be described in the form of a 4-state finite-state automaton that gobbles up two streams of bits and produces a single stream of bits. It takes two bits at a time, one from each of the two input streams, and outputs two bits on the output stream.
I suspect that the "brilliant idea" is akin to this way of pairing   and   I expect the idea is well known, but perhaps only as folklore, and I doubt that it is described or even hinted at in Wikipedia mainspace.  --Lambiam, edited 10:51, 28 July 2024 (UTC) (originall 11:11, 26 July 2024 (UTC))[reply]