Mixed fractions

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Revision as of 16:59, 30 June 2021 by Adam Atkinson (talk | contribs)


Adjacency means different things depending on the context:

  • \( 2x \) means \( 2 \times x\).
  • \( 2 \frac{2}{3} \) means \( 2 + \frac{2}{3}\).

This results in the coincidence \( \sqrt{2 \frac{2}{3}} = 2 \sqrt{\frac{2}{3}} \).

Adam Atkinson says that mixed fractions aren't understood everywhere, which prompted Christian Lawson-Perfect to run a survey on whether they exist[1].

Our best information is that France, Spain, Italy and Portugal are unmixed. Though it is hard to reconcile this with mixed numbers appearing on the syllabus for a particular age range on the Portuguese Ministry of Education web page. Or with their presence in at least some Italian middle school textbooks.

Adam Atkinson talks about Italy and mixed numbers here [2] but this only begins to convey how confusing the situation is if you ask multiple people from the same notionally unmixed country about them. He has been told _authoritatively_ that Belgium is and is not mixed and has no idea what to believe.

References