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How many holes does a straw have?

North Lower Neil
Posts: 22,952
Apparently there are arguments for none (or it'd leak), one (big hole down the middle), or two (each end, obviously).
What do you think?
What do you think?
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We're getting desperate now.
(One)
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Addickted said:We're getting desperate now.
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No holes in a straw, it’s a hollow cylinder.
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charltonkeston said:No holes in a straw, it’s a hollow cylinder.1
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charltonkeston said:No holes in a straw, it’s a hollow cylinder.
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PopIcon said:charltonkeston said:No holes in a straw, it’s a hollow cylinder.
A hula hoop is a hollow cylinder too.2 -
It seems that the mathematically correct answer is one.
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Topology tells us it’s 1. Same as a doughnut.1
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charltonkeston said:No holes in a straw, it’s a hollow cylinder.1
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Is a straw like a worm? If I cut it in two, will both pieces still work?0
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Dazzler21 said:PopIcon said:charltonkeston said:No holes in a straw, it’s a hollow cylinder.
A hula hoop is a hollow cylinder too.
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I've been told all my life, that Polo mint is ...
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If a hole is defined as an absence of matter, the term can only be applied where we are certain that matter should be.
I submit that the straw is simply a continuous curved surface and that no matter ever existed or was intended to exist within the confines of the aforementioned continuous curved surface.
Therefore, there is no hole, there never was a hole. A straw has no hole.
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Dave Rudd said:If a hole is defined as an absence of matter, the term can only be applied where we are certain that matter should be.
I submit that the straw is simply a continuous curved surface and that no matter ever existed or was intended to exist within the confines of the aforementioned continuous curved surface.
Therefore, there is no hole, there never was a hole. A straw has no hole.0 -
PaddyP17 said:Dave Rudd said:If a hole is defined as an absence of matter, the term can only be applied where we are certain that matter should be.
I submit that the straw is simply a continuous curved surface and that no matter ever existed or was intended to exist within the confines of the aforementioned continuous curved surface.
Therefore, there is no hole, there never was a hole. A straw has no hole.
The difference is that, to make the colander, several small bits of metal will have been removed. Therefore the use of the term 'hole' is quite legitimate.
You can, of course, have a hole in a straw. Just puncture the continuous curved surface. Such a straw will not be too useful, though.
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Seven. Anyone willing to give me £5 if I'm wrong?0
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Raith_C_Chattonell said:I've been told all my life, that Polo mint is ...
I prefer the torus shape mint0 -
- Nestlé’s Consumer Services team receives hundreds of calls a year about Polo. Favourite question is what the factory does with the middle of the Polos. The answer is that there never is a middle, each Polo is made with a hole in it.
- The pressure Polo is put under when formed is 75 kilonewtons, which is equivalent to the weight of two elephants jumping on it.
Based on my proposed definition (that the term 'hole' can only be applied where we are certain that matter should be), it would appear that there is no hole in a Polo mint.
It looks like Rowntrees, and subsequently Nestlé, have been fooling us for years.
Outrageous. I will never suck the toroidal confection again.
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PaddyP17 said:Dave Rudd said:If a hole is defined as an absence of matter, the term can only be applied where we are certain that matter should be.
I submit that the straw is simply a continuous curved surface and that no matter ever existed or was intended to exist within the confines of the aforementioned continuous curved surface.
Therefore, there is no hole, there never was a hole. A straw has no hole.
... Why has quarantine got me like so1 -
Fuck this is going to bother me all day.
If I'm being honest, two.4 -
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PaddyP17 said:PaddyP17 said:Dave Rudd said:If a hole is defined as an absence of matter, the term can only be applied where we are certain that matter should be.
I submit that the straw is simply a continuous curved surface and that no matter ever existed or was intended to exist within the confines of the aforementioned continuous curved surface.
Therefore, there is no hole, there never was a hole. A straw has no hole.
... Why has quarantine got me like so
There used to be matter there … and that has subsequently been removed in order to produce the colander. Hence we have a hole (or several holes, in fact).
I'm surprised that you missed this point. It's fairly obvious really … but I forgive you.
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Dave Rudd said:PaddyP17 said:PaddyP17 said:Dave Rudd said:If a hole is defined as an absence of matter, the term can only be applied where we are certain that matter should be.
I submit that the straw is simply a continuous curved surface and that no matter ever existed or was intended to exist within the confines of the aforementioned continuous curved surface.
Therefore, there is no hole, there never was a hole. A straw has no hole.
... Why has quarantine got me like so
There used to be matter there … and that has subsequently been removed in order to produce the colander. Hence we have a hole (or several holes, in fact).
I'm surprised that you missed this point. It's fairly obvious really … but I forgive you.0 -
addix said:Dave Rudd said:PaddyP17 said:PaddyP17 said:Dave Rudd said:If a hole is defined as an absence of matter, the term can only be applied where we are certain that matter should be.
I submit that the straw is simply a continuous curved surface and that no matter ever existed or was intended to exist within the confines of the aforementioned continuous curved surface.
Therefore, there is no hole, there never was a hole. A straw has no hole.
... Why has quarantine got me like so
There used to be matter there … and that has subsequently been removed in order to produce the colander. Hence we have a hole (or several holes, in fact).
I'm surprised that you missed this point. It's fairly obvious really … but I forgive you.
I'm no colander expert, but I imagine that, to call yourself a colander goes way beyond the number of holes. The size and position of the holes are clearly crucial.
But, at the risk of appearing foolish, two holes must be the minimum, although more is preferred. And I don't need to state the obvious, do I? Not all bowls with two holes are colanders.
That would be ridiculous.
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None, one or two... however many holes a straw has, it’ll be less holes than are in @PopIcon ’s Chris Powell argument.1
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Dave Rudd said:PaddyP17 said:PaddyP17 said:Dave Rudd said:If a hole is defined as an absence of matter, the term can only be applied where we are certain that matter should be.
I submit that the straw is simply a continuous curved surface and that no matter ever existed or was intended to exist within the confines of the aforementioned continuous curved surface.
Therefore, there is no hole, there never was a hole. A straw has no hole.
... Why has quarantine got me like so
There used to be matter there … and that has subsequently been removed in order to produce the colander. Hence we have a hole (or several holes, in fact).
I'm surprised that you missed this point. It's fairly obvious really … but I forgive you.1 -
charltonkeston said:Dave Rudd said:PaddyP17 said:PaddyP17 said:Dave Rudd said:If a hole is defined as an absence of matter, the term can only be applied where we are certain that matter should be.
I submit that the straw is simply a continuous curved surface and that no matter ever existed or was intended to exist within the confines of the aforementioned continuous curved surface.
Therefore, there is no hole, there never was a hole. A straw has no hole.
... Why has quarantine got me like so
There used to be matter there … and that has subsequently been removed in order to produce the colander. Hence we have a hole (or several holes, in fact).
I'm surprised that you missed this point. It's fairly obvious really … but I forgive you.
It's not difficult, is it?
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Dave Rudd said:charltonkeston said:Dave Rudd said:PaddyP17 said:PaddyP17 said:Dave Rudd said:If a hole is defined as an absence of matter, the term can only be applied where we are certain that matter should be.
I submit that the straw is simply a continuous curved surface and that no matter ever existed or was intended to exist within the confines of the aforementioned continuous curved surface.
Therefore, there is no hole, there never was a hole. A straw has no hole.
... Why has quarantine got me like so
There used to be matter there … and that has subsequently been removed in order to produce the colander. Hence we have a hole (or several holes, in fact).
I'm surprised that you missed this point. It's fairly obvious really … but I forgive you.
It's not difficult, is it?0