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Originally Posted by AntonioLao Both. I know, I find it very difficult to graph zero, but if I graphed 1 and -1, zero is exactly located at the midpoint between 1 and -1. |
Interesting, spetially for this: Imagine the graph is the graph of complex numbers, with the horizontal (x) dimension being the real numbers and the imaginary numbers being the vertical (y) dimension. This mean that the midpoint between any two complex numbers is 0. But it doesn't make sense because 0 is the cross point between the two dimension. Or maybe this zeros to whic h you refer to, we can call them "local zeros" in contrast to the other "universal zero"?