- #1
georg gill
- 153
- 6
This is the proof
http://planetmath.org/encyclopedia/ProofOfPropertiesOfTheExponential.html
I wonder what they do when they describe monotnicity for integers. Why is
[tex]x^p<y<p[/tex] when x<y and p is a positive integer? What if p was really large?and further down in the part homogeneity for rational exponents is there a typo there? Should not
[tex] (v_1 v_2)^n > (xy)^m[/tex]
and not
[tex] (v_1 v_2)^n < (xy)^m[/tex]
or?
http://planetmath.org/encyclopedia/ProofOfPropertiesOfTheExponential.html
I wonder what they do when they describe monotnicity for integers. Why is
[tex]x^p<y<p[/tex] when x<y and p is a positive integer? What if p was really large?and further down in the part homogeneity for rational exponents is there a typo there? Should not
[tex] (v_1 v_2)^n > (xy)^m[/tex]
and not
[tex] (v_1 v_2)^n < (xy)^m[/tex]
or?
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