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by onion2k
701 days ago
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The fact you can't encode arbitrary data in a structured-but-irrational number doesn't mean you can't encode data in a 'random' irrational number. The question is really 'Does every series of numbers of arbitrary finite length appear in pi?' I can't answer that because I'm not a mathematician, but I also can't dismiss it, because I'm not a mathematician. It sounds like a fair question to me. |
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So what? Mathematicians can't answer it either. It is an open question and because it is an open question claiming it is or isn't true makes no sense.
>The fact you can't encode arbitrary data in a structured-but-irrational number doesn't mean you can't encode data in a 'random' irrational number.
You can not encode data in a random number. If it is random you can not encode data in it, because it is random. I am not sure what you are saying here.
I demonstrated that numbers where the digits go on forever and never repeat exist, which don't contain every single possible substring of digits. Therefore we know that pi can either be such or a number or it is not, the answer to that is not known. Definitely it is not a property of pi being infinitely long and never repeating.