User:Daniel/Sandbox: Difference between revisions

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* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3T1T51cH3A Wikidata on Apache Jena and Fuseki]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3T1T51cH3A Wikidata on Apache Jena and Fuseki]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y5wiWCR9Axc Pythagoras twisted squares: Why did they not teach you any of this in school?]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y5wiWCR9Axc Pythagoras twisted squares: Why did they not teach you any of this in school?]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nmgFG7PUHfo The Fast Fourier Transform — The Algorithm That Transformed The World]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=spUNpyF58BY But what is the Fourier Transform? A visual introduction]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=spUNpyF58BY But what is the Fourier Transform? A visual introduction]



Revision as of 12:48, 13 December 2022

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NFDI interactions

Interwiki links

To Wikidata

Properties

Existing properties
Proposed properties

Items

To Wikipedia

To Wikiversity

Math-related lexemes

Lexeme challenges

  • Numbers (5/n): mathematics (Q395), algebra (Q3968), arithmetic (Q11205), 19 (Q39850), 20 (Q40292), 30 (Q42817), 40 (Q42317)
  • Numbers (4/n): equation (Q11345), square (Q111124), square root (Q134237), 14 (Q38582), 16 (Q40254), 17 (Q40118), 18 (Q38712)
  • Numbers (3/n): multiplication (Q40276), division (Q1226939), 10 (Q23806), 11 (Q37136), 12 (Q36977), 13 (Q37141), 15 (Q38701)
  • Numbers (2/n): addition (Q32043), subtraction (Q40754), 5 (Q203), 6 (Q23488), 7 (Q23350), 8 (Q23355), 9 (Q19108)
  • Numbers (1/n): number (Q11563), numerical digit (Q82990), zero (Q204), 1 (Q199), 2 (Q200), 3 (Q201), 4 (Q202)

Math videos

Math & biology

  • RCC-5 classification
Merging taxonomies under RCC-5 algebraic articulations (Q114740027): "CLEANTAX uses the RCC-5 [Randell et al. 1992] topological algebra as the basis for representing articulations. This algebra describes relationships between sets, and supports the expression of incomplete knowledge when stating articulations. The RCC-5 algebra uses the same five basic relations (B5) as several biological taxonomic alignments and taxonomic reasoning systems [Berendsohn 2003; Koperski et al. 2000; Franz et al. 2007]. Given any two non-empty sets N and M, exactly one of the B5 relations holds (cf. Figure 5) between them: (i) congruence (N ≡ M), (ii) proper inclusion (N # M), (iii) proper inverse inclusion (N ! M), (iv) partial overlap (N ⊕ M), or (v) exclusion (disjointness) (N ! M)."

Math & politics

Interesting papers