It’s good, although I expected something like the following that I wrote in the past:
In this formula, the subscript 36 refers to the radix 36, so it means that both the polynomial coefficients as well as its roots are base-36; all Latin letters are base-36 digits and that’s why I used a Greek letter as the variable for the polynomial; it has two roots holding a humorous yet deep meaning.
Decimal version (convert the two roots to base-36):
It’s good, although I expected something like the following that I wrote in the past:
In this formula, the subscript 36 refers to the radix 36, so it means that both the polynomial coefficients as well as its roots are base-36; all Latin letters are base-36 digits and that’s why I used a Greek letter as the variable for the polynomial; it has two roots holding a humorous yet deep meaning.
Decimal version (convert the two roots to base-36):
f(x) = x^2 - 18425439x + 11126047267730