A highlight from the second one: "What can we say about incomplete prime patterns? A Type I incomplete pattern has a well-defined inverse, shown schematically in the following figure, where there is an extra missing state on one of the shift cycles (L = Lbound-1). The inverse follows along the (contiguous) reversed missing states with shift (+/-) throws and is not superprime."
Incidentally, I've been working on 423 variations, 633, 6631, 7333, 71, 9151, 7733, and [6x,4],[4,6x]. It's because I'm cool, and not at all geeky.
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And then when you've got that,
http://www.jugglingdb.com/compendium/geek/notation/siteswap/longest.html
A highlight from the second one: "What can we say about incomplete prime patterns? A Type I incomplete pattern has a well-defined inverse, shown schematically in the following figure, where there is an extra missing state on one of the shift cycles (L = Lbound-1). The inverse follows along the (contiguous) reversed missing states with shift (+/-) throws and is not superprime."
Incidentally, I've been working on 423 variations, 633, 6631, 7333, 71, 9151, 7733, and [6x,4],[4,6x]. It's because I'm cool, and not at all geeky.
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since when did UR have latin
-Dave (to lazy to sign in)
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UR has had Latin for a very long time. It's offered in the Religion and Classics department - along with ancient Greek, Hebrew, and Arabic.
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