Question 989492
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I'm sure you don't mean that you want us to say something nice about either your statement, or the patients seen today, or even infectious diseases, even though that is what the word <i>compliment</i> means.  I suspect you meant <i>compl<b>e</b>ment</i>.  The problem is, complement has a couple of very specific definitions in mathematics, but none of them apply to a statement.  Statements or assertions have inverses, converses, and contrapositives, but the complement of a statement makes no sense. Please share what you mean or at least your definition of the word complement as it applies to assertions of fact.


John
*[tex \LARGE e^{i\pi}\ +\ 1\ =\ 0]
My calculator said it, I believe it, that settles it

*[tex \Large \ \
*[tex \LARGE \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \