User talk:NewtonEin

Welcome!

Hello, NewtonEin, and welcome to Wikipedia! Thank you for your contributions. I hope you like the place and decide to stay. Here are some pages that you might find helpful: I hope you enjoy editing here and being a Wikipedian! Please sign your messages on discussion pages using four tildes ( ~ ); this will automatically insert your username and the date. If you need help, check out Questions, ask me on my talk page, or ask your question on this page and then place  before the question. Again, welcome! Ordehm (talk) 05:12, 11 January 2011 (UTC)
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January 2011
Welcome to Wikipedia. It might not have been your intention, but your recent edit removed content from Lapierre-Roy vectors. When removing content, please specify a reason in the edit summary and discuss edits that are likely to be controversial on the article's talk page. If this was a mistake, don't worry; the content has been restored, as you can see from the page history. Take a look at the welcome page to learn more about contributing to this encyclopedia, and if you would like to experiment, please use the sandbox. Thank you. —C.Fred (talk) 01:41, 17 January 2011 (UTC)

As you will have noticed by now, your article Lapierre-Roy vectors is currently up for deletion. This is because it constitutes original research, which cannot be accepted under the scope of Wikipedia (you may want to read up on the five pillars). Your article seems interesting, though, so why don't you publish it somewhere else (if you haven't already done so)? Nageh (talk) 20:53, 17 January 2011 (UTC)

Hilbert space
Hello.

Your article titled Lapierre-Roy vectors was redoing a small part of the work done by David Hilbert a century ago; see Hilbert space. One problem with the article is that it violated the policy against original research. There is a forum for original research in mathematics on the internet: the arXiv. Another problem could have been avoided by inquiring at Reference desk/Mathematics, where you would have been told that Hilbert spaces are already widely known, i.e. what you were doing was nothing new. Michael Hardy (talk) 16:06, 23 January 2011 (UTC)