this post was submitted on 18 Dec 2025
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[–] SmartmanApps@programming.dev 1 points 1 week ago (4 children)

having an agreed-upon convention absolutely matters for arriving at expected computational outcomes,

Proven rules actually

we call it a convention

No we don't - the order of operations rules

it’s not a “correct” vs “incorrect” principle of mathematics

The rules most definitely are

It’s just a rule we agreed upon to allow consistent results

proven rules which are true whether you agree to it or not! 😂

any good math educator will be clear on this

Yep

If you know the PEMDAS convention already, that’s good, since it’s by far the most common today

No it isn't.

But if you don’t yet, don’t worry

As long as you know the rules then that's all that matters

[–] Septimaeus@infosec.pub 0 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Dear Mr Rules,

I’m not sure what motivates you to so generously offer your various dyadic tokens of knowledge on this subject without qualification while ignoring my larger point, but will assume in good faith that your thirst for knowledge rivals that of your devotion to The Rules.

First, a question: what are conventions if not agreed upon rules? Second, here is a history of how we actually came to agree upon the aforementioned rules which you may find interesting:

https://www.themathdoctors.org/order-of-operations-historical-caveats/

Happy ruling to you.

[–] SmartmanApps@programming.dev 1 points 1 week ago (2 children)

knowledge on this subject without qualification

I'm a Maths teacher with a Masters - thanks for asking - how about you?

while ignoring my larger point

You mean your invalid point, that I debunked?

what are conventions if not agreed upon rules?

Conventions are optional, rules aren't.

here is a history of how we actually came to agree upon the aforementioned rules which you may find interesting

He's well-known to be wrong about his "history", and if you read through the comments you'll find plenty of people telling him that, including references. Cajori wrote the definitive books about the history of Maths (notation). They're available for free on the Internet Archive - no need to believe some random crank and his blog.

[–] Septimaeus@infosec.pub 0 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Dear colleague,

By qualification I meant explanation. My doctorate is irrelevant to the truth.

Since you asked, my larger point was about the unhelpful nature of this content, which makes students of math feel inordinately inferior or superior hinged entirely on a single point of familiarity. I don’t handle early math education, but many of my students arrive with baggage from it that hinders their progress, leading me to suspect that early math education sometimes discourages students unnecessarily. In particular, these gotcha-style math memes IMO deepen students’ belief that they’re just bad at math. Hence my dislike of them.

Re: Dave Peterson, I’ll need to read more about this debate regarding the history of notation and I’ll search for the “proven rules” you mentioned (proofs mean something very specific to me and I can’t yet imagine what that looks like WRT order of operations).

If what riled you up was my use of the word “conventions” I can use another, but note that conventions aren’t necessarily “optional” when being understood is essential. Where one places a comma in writing can radically change the meaning of a sentence, for example. My greater point however has nothing to do with that. Here I am only concerned about the next generation of maths student and how viral content like this can discourage them unnecessarily.

[–] SmartmanApps@programming.dev 1 points 4 days ago

My doctorate is irrelevant to the truth

It sure is. I've seen a PhD who didn't read the only textbook he had referenced in his thesis, which proved his idea that teachers were doing it wrong and he wasn't, was wrong. 😂 Should've listened to the people who teach it (or actually read the textbook he referenced 🙄 ).

which makes students of math feel inordinately inferior

They don't. All students get this correct. It's only adults who have forgotten the rules that get it wrong.

these gotcha-style math memes IMO deepen students’ belief that they’re just bad at math

Nope. Students never get these wrong.

proofs mean something very specific to me and I can’t yet imagine what that looks like WRT order of operations

All you have to do is see which way gives wrong answers for 2+3x4 and you've proven which ways don't work 😂

note that conventions aren’t necessarily “optional”

Yes they are.

when being understood is essential

You don't understand how to do 2+3x4-5 without knowing which conventions people use for the order of the plus and minus?

Here I am only concerned about the next generation of maths student and how viral content like this can discourage them unnecessarily

It doesn't. None of them get it wrong. 🙄