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==Explanation==
 
==Explanation==
In this comic, [[Cueball]] is showing a diagram titled "{{w|Venn diagram}}" he made about something to an unseen audience. An off-panel person informs Cueball that it is an {{W|Euler diagram}}, and starts to explain why, prompting Cueball to forestall the interruption and state that {{w|List of things named after Leonhard Euler|many things}} are named for {{w|Leonhard Euler}} (specifically {{w|Euler's constant}} and {{w|Euler's function}} apart from Euler diagram) and he just wants to call the diagram a Venn diagram to give {{w|John Venn}} a more equal share of the fame. His off-screen friend refuses, and mockingly states that numbers are now called "Euler letters".
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{{incomplete|Created by JOHN EULER AND LEONHARD VENN - Please change this comment when editing this page. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}}
  
This may be in response to the fact that [[Randall]] has made several comics about both [[:Category:Euler diagrams|Euler diagrams]] and [[:Category:Venn diagrams|Venn diagrams]] and has sometimes used the term Venn diagram for an Euler diagram, as in [[2090: Feathered Dinosaur Venn Diagram]]. Maybe this was on purpose, as Cueball did here, or by mistake. In either case Randall has probably heard a lot from fans and friends when he made these comics, and thus this could be seen as a response.
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In this comic, [[Cueball]] is showing an offscreen person a {{w|Venn diagram}} he made about something. The offscreen person then informs Cueball that it is in fact a {{W|Euler diagram}}, not a Venn diagram. Cueball then proceeds to complain that many things are named for {{w|Leonhard Euler}} (specifically {{w|Euler's constant}} and {{w|Euler's function}}) and and wants to call the diagram a Venn diagram to give {{w|John Venn}} more credit. His off-screen friends refuses, and mockingly states that numbers are now called "Euler letters", which is currently false.{{citation needed}}
  
A Venn diagram is a widely used diagram style that shows the logical relation between sets.  It shows overlap of items in different categories (sets) by using overlapping circles (or other shapes) to stand in for categories. If an item is within a certain circle, it is in the category the circle represents. So in a Venn diagram of "animals" and "furry things", "cat" would be in the overlap between both circles, "frog" would be inside only "animals", and "kiwifruit" would only be in "furry things". "Crystals" would be outside both  
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A Venn diagram is "a widely used diagram style that shows the logical relation between sets".  It shows overlap of items in different categories (sets) by using overlapping circles (or other shapes) to stand in for categories. If an item is within a certain circle, it is in the category the circle represents. So in a Venn diagram of "animals" and "fuzzy things", cat would be in the overlap between both circles, frog would be inside only "animals", and "kiwifruit would only be in "fuzzy things". "Trees" would be outside both circles. In a Venn diagram, all 'circles' must overlap with all other circles, even if there are no items in the overlap. This is easy enough for 2 and 3 sets, but as the number of sets increases the diagrams can get [https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn22159-logic-blooms-with-new-11-set-venn-diagram/ rather complicated], and the sets can start looking very non-circular. An Euler diagram only depicts the non-empty combinations, and therefore does not have this constraint.
circles.
 
  
[[File:Euler Diagrams title text.png|300px|thumb|right|The title text as a Venn (and, simultaneously, an Euler) diagram]]
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The title text is an example of a "written" Venn diagram, with Leonhard Euler creating "most of math", John Venn creating a {{w|cricket}} bowling machine, and both of them having created overlapping circle diagrams.
 
 
{{w|John Venn}} was not the first to invent the idea of drawing regions whose overlap shows the intersection of sets — that was popularized by Euler (although he may not have been the first to do it) and was known as {{w|Euler Diagram}}s. Venn's innovation, roughly 100 years later, was to consistently draw ALL intersections of sets, even those intersections that had no members. In a Venn diagram, all 'circles' must overlap with all other circles, even if there are no items in the overlap. This is easy enough for 2 and 3 sets, but as the number of sets increases, the diagrams can get rather complicated, as previously shown in [[2122: Size Venn Diagram]]. [https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn22159-logic-blooms-with-new-11-set-venn-diagram/ These] [https://raw.githubusercontent.com/wiki/tctianchi/pyvenn/venn6.png three] [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Supranational_European_Bodies links] demonstrate the issue, in which sets can start looking very non-circular. An Euler diagram is required to depict only the non-empty combinations/sets, and therefore does not have this constraint. The diagram in the comic does not have any overlap between the left and right sections so, while it is an Euler diagram, it is not a Venn diagram.
 
 
 
The title text is an example of a "written" Venn diagram, with Leonhard Euler creating "{{w|Contributions of Leonhard Euler to mathematics|most of math}}", both of them having created overlapping circle diagrams, and John Venn creating a {{w|cricket}} {{w|bowling (cricket)|bowling}} machine. In his Wikipedia article it is stated that ''He built rare machines. A certain machine was meant to bowl cricket balls.'' See the title text drawn as a diagram in the inserted picture.
 
 
 
On a side note, if Euler letters were a thing, then they would be digits. And numbers would be Euler words!
 
  
 
==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==
:[Cueball is standing in front of a whiteboard with both arms raised holding his palms up towards and unseen audience. A person from the audience talks to him from off-panel. The whiteboard shows an Euler diagram with two large circles overlapping in the middle and a third smaller circle overlapping only the top right part of the right circle. There are lots of illegible text on the board. Three lines of text are in the left circle only, one line is in the shared part of the two circles, two in the bottom part of the right circle, two lines in the overlap with the small circle and one line only in the small third circle. Above the circles are two more lines of illegible text and above those a large heading and one readable word below that, just above the first illegible text:]
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{{incomplete transcript|Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}}<br>
:Venn Diagram
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:[Cueball is standing in front of a whiteboard with his palms raised. The text "Venn Diagram of" is visible in large letters, with "of" on the next line and slightly smaller. Below this are two squiggly lines representing illegible text, followed by a <strike>Venn</strike> Euler diagram.] <!-- If someone wants to add more about the diagram they can, but I think that this pair of brackets is getting pretty long.-->
:of
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:Friend (offscreen): Actually, that's an ''Euler'' diagram, because-
:Off-panel voice: Actually, that's an ''Euler'' diagram, because-
 
 
:Cueball: Come '''''onnnn.'''''
 
:Cueball: Come '''''onnnn.'''''
 
:Cueball: '''''Everything''''' is named after Euler. Euler's constant, Euler's function.
 
:Cueball: '''''Everything''''' is named after Euler. Euler's constant, Euler's function.
 
:Cueball: Can't we let John Venn have this?
 
:Cueball: Can't we let John Venn have this?
:Off-panel voice: No.
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:Friend (offscreen): No.
:Off-panel voice: Also, numbers are now "Euler letters."
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:Friend (offscreen): Also, numbers are now "Euler letters."
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{{comic discussion}}
 
{{comic discussion}}
 
 
[[Category:Comics featuring Cueball]]
 
[[Category:Comics featuring Cueball]]
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[[Category:Math]]
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[[Category:Euler diagrams]]
 
[[Category:Venn diagrams]]
 
[[Category:Venn diagrams]]
[[Category:Euler diagrams]]
 
[[Category:Comics featuring real people]]
 
[[Category:Math]]
 
 
[[Category:Sport]] <!-- Cricket -->
 
[[Category:Sport]] <!-- Cricket -->

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