Dirac mathematics is the discrete foundation of computer science.
It argues that if you lop off a portion of a circle with the line from one point of the cut to the other side of the cut in the circle being a-straight-line basically an arc-tangent-length the number points in the "lop" can be, qualitatively, discrete, infinite, or irrational.
If the circle is cut above-but-parallel-to the diameter the draw-distance of the points extracted from the cut portion will be discrete. If the circle is cut BELOW the diameter-halfway point--the line created from the number of points will have an IRRATIONAL draw-distance.
Dirac mathematics demarcates a corresponding draw-distance based on whether a circle is cut above or below the line of diameter. A cut at the diameter corresponds to an infinite draw-distance using the number of points (infinite) in the cut.
A cut above the diameter corresponds to a statistical inference; a cut AT the diameter (1/2 point) corresponds to CAUSATION.
A cut below the diameter-line corresponds to a regression--scientifically meaningless.
How to get bitches on bitches on bitches - a singularity of bitches
Last night, I showed off how to transform Maxwell's equations to some hoes and I got a Dirac Delta Function of them
Paradigm that an irrational number can never exceed infinity.
The declarative foundation of computer science.
Dirac-ism is based on the phenomenon that cutting arc-tangent-lengths below the line of diameter produces a 2D surface with an irrational number of points. Since an infinity-number of points can only be obtained from a circle cut at the line-of-diameter: statistical regression created by the points below the half-way mark can never reach infinity.
Worlds foremost cs player. Producer and star of the amazing clip cslegend
Known to own on n00b italy.
"Dirac ownz"
Ryan's Paul plays Paul Dirac in Oppenheimer; from indie drama star to theoretical physicist. A role of quantum importance.
Example of how it's used in a sentence:
Person 1: Who's playing that serious-looking scientist in Oppenheimer?
Person 2: It's Ryan Stubo as Paul Dirac! He's gone from indie drama to quantum physics.