My favorite thing about this argument is that not only are you right, but you can prove it with math.
you can prove it with math
Not a proof, just wrong. In the β(substitute 0.9999β¦ = x)β step, it was only done to one side, not both (the left side wouldβve become 9.99999), therefore wrong.
The substitution property of equality is a part of its definition; you can substitute anywhere.
you can substitute anywhere
And if you are rearranging algebra you have to do the exact same thing on both sides, always
They multiplied both sides by 10.
0.9999β¦ times 10 is 9.9999β¦
X times 10 is 10x.
Except it doesnβt. The math is wrong. Do the exact same formula, but use .5555β¦ instead of .9999β¦
Guess it turns out .5555β¦ is also 1.