<p>(9/10) * sum( from n = 0 to infinity, .1^n)</p>
<p>This is that special series(can’t believe I forgot the name, swear it’s geometric or something) where you can compute the sum using the formula with:</p>
<p>what is infinity? that’s what ppl made up to use limits and eventually differencials and integrals.</p>
<p>but, really, when does infinity become an infinity? im pretty sure that there is a number before. if so, we could add as many numbers as we want to that, first, number and still get a finite result</p>
<p>im not sure what i meant there^ lol, but my point is that one can always make an infinity finite he-he</p>
<p>so, .9999999…would be always a finite number (sounds weird) and thus, would never be equal to 1</p>
<p>i do gree though, that the LIMIT of .99999…would be equal (i’d rather say APPROACH) to 1
but the number .99999… – no way:)</p>
<p>Sagar Indurkhaya is correct.
It is out of the question.-as logic serves</p>
<p>You might think about it as the hotel with infinite number of rooms(those who are interested in math will know about this analogy).–look at "Fermat’s last theorem;by Simon Singh –</p>
<p>There was a semi correct solution shown to me in 4th grade-i think-</p>
<p>Read through the thread I linked. It will address any disbelief you have. The result 0.999… = 1, is true and undebatable. Unless you redefining the number 0.999…, or the metric, which of course proves nothing.</p>
<p>ok…i’ve looked through that thread…
to tell you the truth, i didnt get a lot from there…he-he…i’m stupid lol</p>
<p>for me (and as Icarus said) infinity is just a CONCEPT…there is no such thing as infinity…(in real world)</p>
<p>so they say that .9999999…is not a real number b/c it goes to infinity, and they also say that REAL numbers can’t go to infinity…
ok…i got that point</p>
<p>what’s 1 then? can we represent 1 as 1.00000… i think yes. so now this number also becomes NOT real and we can compare 1.000…with .9999…
in 1.0000… zeros would go and go forever (i dont mean that forever=infinity)
in 0.9999… nines would go and go forever</p>
<p>so there would be always some interval between them (even if this interval IS unreal)</p>
<p>.999… IS a real number, because it is equal to 1, which is a real number. They are both representations of the same real number. There is no interval between them because there is no real number between .999… and 1, therefore they are the same number.</p>
<p>Yep, .999… definitely equals 1. say .999… = x, then 9.999… = 10x. if we take the difference, we get 9x = 9, which means x =1. therefore, .999…= 1.</p>