• @NerdyPopRocks
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    113 months ago

    The second method is very chemistry-like. I do that too naturally

    • @Fatticus
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      113 months ago

      I thought that too, 9 is like a halogen, it wants to resolve to 10 anyway it can like fluorine wants one last electron. So allow the 9 to rip one off of the neighboring numbers and then perform the calculation.

      • @NerdyPopRocks
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        23 months ago

        I’ve never really liked the anthropomorphic description of chemical bonding, but maybe it’s actually similar to the addition thing. On the one hand, we can say 9 wants to resolve to 10 and takes a 1, and on the other hand we could say there are a bunch of different ways we could rearrange these numbers but the end result is the same as if we resolve 9 to 10 first. Maybe chemical reactions are similar, so there’s a bunch of configurations that could have happened, but the end result is the same as if we had said fluorine wants that last electron

        • @NerdyPopRocks
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          13 months ago

          Although, electron affinity is a thing… so the analogy does break down pretty quick. Rip

    • @[email protected]
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      13 months ago

      So do I! When I saw that 9 stealing a 1 and becoming a 10, I thought “Wait… These are electrons. This is chemistry. That 9 is a halogen!”