this post was submitted on 15 Apr 2026
30 points (100.0% liked)

technology

24328 readers
194 users here now

On the road to fully automated luxury gay space communism.

Spreading Linux propaganda since 2020

Rules:

founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
 

This paper discovered the continuous math equivalent of the digital NAND gate. It turns out that a single binary operation paired with the constant 1 can generate every single standard elementary function. That operation is defined as eml(x,y)=exp(x)-ln(y). You can reconstruct constants like pi and the imaginary unit alongside basic addition and complex calculus tools using nothing but this one function.

The implications for machine learning and symbolic regression are massive. Normally when artificial intelligence tries to discover mathematical formulas from data it has to search through a chaotic space of different operators and syntax rules. Because the EML operator turns every mathematical expression into a uniform binary tree of identical nodes the search space becomes perfectly regular. You can basically treat a mathematical formula like a neural network circuit. The paper shows that when you train these EML trees using standard gradient optimizers like Adam the weights can actually snap to exact closed-form symbolic expressions instead of just giving fuzzy numerical approximations.

This finding could change how we design analog circuits and specialized computing hardware. If you only need a single instruction to execute any complex mathematical function you could build physical hardware or single instruction stack machines optimized purely for the EML operation. The fact that this was discovered by computationally stripping down a calculator rather than through purely theoretical derivation highlights how much structural beauty is still hiding in basic math.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[โ€“] Soot@hexbear.net 2 points 10 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago) (1 children)

Ah, thank you for explaining, I think I understand! This is a seeming theoretical demonstration that by making hardware that performs just a single function in an analog capacity, we should be able to do all analog (or 'continuous') functions from it, and consequently we would only need one reliable piece of analog hardware that could massively up efficiency and speed by replacing analog-approximation functions that computers do now.

In which case, hecka fuckin' cool. Obviously as other commenter says, compounding errors could prove an issue, but it's not like that's an unmanageable issue.

[โ€“] yogthos@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 7 hours ago

Yeah, this would actually need to be tried out to see what happens. But it's neat to see a completely new way to approach the problem.