Wikipedia:Reference Desk -- Archive
I have a question about NP-complete problems. (There are a couple of small articles on this, but their names seem to be rapidly mobile lately, try searching.) OK, so 3-SAT is NP-complete. That's where you have to satisfy clauses that are the OR of three different variables, each possibly negated. How about if the clauses are the XOR of three variables. How about if the clauses are Majority function of three variables, each possibly negated. (That is 2 or 3 out of 3 must be true). How about if exactly one must be true, etc. added August 20. This problem is left as an exercise by the reader :) Seriously, most of them are probably NP-complete, some aren't. To prove a particular problem as NP-complete, you need to prove it's in NP (which should be trivial as they are restricted instances of SAT and thus in NP), and then transform another NP-complete problem into that problem (so, for instance, show that you can transform any instance of OR 3-SAT into XOR 3-SAT). --User:Robert Merkel
What are the largest moons in the solar system? A few are larger than Mercury, no? (Posted Sept. 4.) -- See moon for a list of those bigger than Pluto.
What exactly is going on on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange? Stock exchange and New York Stock Exchange do not yet contain an answer. (Posted Sept. 17.)
Today, a lot of moaning, gnashing of teeth, and beating of breasts.
Doesn't that happen every day?
I've added a little more of a description of the trading floor to New York Stock Exchange. It'd be nice if someone could clarify some other things, though, e.g: 1) What powers the NYSE employee has over the stock she's managing, and 2) How the traders actually on the NYSE floor connect back to people that invest without physically going to NYSE. --Ryguasu 08:56 Dec 26, 2002 (UTC)
I would like to know what kind of work the prisonsers in Auschwitz II Birkenau (those that were not gassed on arrival) had to do on a daily basis. AxelBoldt 11:54 Sep 2, 2002 (PDT)
Axel, I can recommend that you read Primo Levi's first hand accounts in The Truce (Published in the US as Survival in Auschwitz). user:sjc
20020912 I would like the history behind the Canadian expression "Canuck". I'm also interesed in the etymology behind the word itself, Cheers, Lars.
Here's a question that any encyclopedia worth its salt must answer: why do dogs eat other dogs' poop? This has been bothering me for a long time. As an exercise to the reader (writer!): you must find an appropriate place to answer this question in the encyclopedia. Cuisine? Most people don't consider dog poop cuisine, though some dogs might. Dog? Too general. Dog cuisine? Too easily confused with certain East Asian dishes. Perhaps canine ethology, but I don't even know if that is regarded as a field. So! Creativity and research are needed! (Posted Jan. 11, 2001.) Because dogs are morons. Next question? (Indeed! :-) But what explains this moronic behavior?) The real answer is apparently "several possible reasons, including copying their mother, copying their owner, or just because they like the taste". Full study of the issue at Coprophagia in the Canine Wasn't Coprophagia an album by The Who? I found the study, now someone else can write the damned article! :) (Grand, so now we know where to put the article: coprophagia!) Because some dog owners like to let their dogs lick their face!
What is potential difference? All I remember from school is something about electricity being compared to the height of rivers & speed of water flow, which (as I recall) left everyone more confused than ever. -- Tarquin 01:36 Aug 27, 2002 (PDT)
Potential difference is a pedantic term for what normal people call a voltage. Since a voltage can only be measured across two points, the statement that "the voltage of point X is Y volts" is meaningless unless you know what point the measurement was relative to. As an engineer I was taught that it is better to say "the potential difference between point X and point Z is Y volts".
In normal parlance, people say things like "the mains voltage in the UK is (nominally) 240 volts", which everybody understands to mean that, if you put an ac voltmeter across the live and neutral wires, the meter will read (nominally) 240 volts. The context makes it clear that points X and Z are the live and neutral wires.
Another reason to distinguish "potential difference" from "voltage" is that the latter term implies that we are using the SI unit of volts. If somebody one day replaced the SI system with another, then the volt would become obsolete, and "potential difference" would be measured in fnuts or whatever.
A similar contrast exists between "current" and "amperage". Physicists and pedants prefer the term "current" because it's general, but engineers and real people sometimes talk about "amperage" because amperes are what appear on most current-measuring instruments. If amperes were one day replaced by gzorts then ammeters would have to be renamed gzortmeters, but the word "current" could still be used.
If this isn't clear then please complain, and I'll have another go.
-- user:Heron
I agree, with you, Heron. I prefer the Sino-Japanese term for voltage, which, I believe literally means "electricity pressure".