My professor said that $P=NP$. I believe him, but am struggling to prove this to be true. I have been staring at this equation for hours, and at this point am completely befuddled. Someone please help. My professor also said anyone who proves it will get extra-credit. The Lord knows I could use some.
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2This is a joke right? – Seeker Oct 16 '22 at 05:31
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@Seeker no????? – Ethan Oct 16 '22 at 05:32
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1lol thats hilarious you got a legendary professor – David Raveh Oct 16 '22 at 05:33
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@DavidRaveh What is happening – Ethan Oct 16 '22 at 05:34
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3This is an open problem. It’s even one of the millennium problems. – Seeker Oct 16 '22 at 05:38
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Basically, no extra credit in this class lmao – David Raveh Oct 16 '22 at 05:39
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2@Seeker Wow so I’ve just been trolled by the prof. Thanks bud you’ve saved me a lot of work tonight. Go flames go – Ethan Oct 16 '22 at 05:40
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@DavidRaveh yea professor draisaitl isn’t the nicest guy. Shoulda known it was a prank – Ethan Oct 16 '22 at 05:42
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If you like, you can troll back and write that if $N=1$, $P=NP$ follows identically – David Raveh Oct 16 '22 at 05:42
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I'm pretty sure you're professor is just joking around. If you want to joke back, you can let $P=0$ and let $N$ be any number you want. – Accelerator Oct 16 '22 at 05:43
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Preciate it Accelerator davidraveh seeker. Y’all r life savers. Live long and prosper alhamdullilah amen – Ethan Oct 16 '22 at 05:46