Hey, it’s the only thing I remember from linear algebra! That’s the longest living sheep ever.
I just checked and every single textbook I own that contains a reference to this transformation uses an image of a sheep. Sadly all of my textbooks are in English. If I had any relevant texts in German or Spanish I doubt that they would makes this connection.
On an less relevant note one of the books introduces the idea of change of basis with a joke about labeling axes and has several different types of ax with corresponding labels attached and I find that to be a much worse joke.
In English the tool for chopping down trees is spelled axe. Just letting you know since you’re multilingual and I assume English isn’t your first language.
English is my first language. Ax and axe are used interchangeably. They’re both correct.
I guess because it’s absurd you’ll remember it easier.
Kind of how people can recall a deck of cards playing placing people doing an action to an object in familiar places. It’s the absurdity that makes you remember.
He done shown me shorned sheared sheep!
Needs more frying
just for you!
Sheep: 🐑
Sheared Sheep: 🐑
How did you italisize an emoji?
Huh. TIL that italic emoji are a thing.
…I don’t know why that’s surprising to me, since they’re just Unicode, but it is.
👌🏻
“As verbs the difference between sheared and shorn is that sheared is past tense of shear while shorn is past tense of shear.”
Thanks, internet, you’re very useful.
Shiela sheared sheep by the sheep shorn.
At least its not read and read
Potato potato.
A sheer waste of time, you say?
That’s a fine transformation.
Holy shit, I did my equivalent of this class over 2 decades ago and I remember this bloody joke.
Whoever wrote that book has got a lot of mileage from it
Edit: oh the screencap is older than a decade lol