Converge in a sentence as a verb

In the future as SSDs will converge more with memory, this may change.

You have to converge at a distance and focus at another, and that's really hard for some people.

Then on this problem we can do a binary search on c and converge to optimality.

Stand in the middle and look down its length, and it appears to converge to a singularity in the distance.

Trying convergence here seems like something very easy to botch horribly.

But how do you know which experiment to run, on your microscopically-flawed parts, in order to converge on working parts?

Here complete means Cauchy convergent means convergent where we consider distance in Hilbert space which is the metric we get from the inner product.

That's where every infinite subset has a limit point, that is, in the infinite subset is a sequence that converges to something.

On a normal job this is clear enough - the clothes, the physical setting, the timetable, all converge to trigger your professional mindset.

".In particular, man made the real numbers to be complete which means that every sequence that appears to converge, that is, meets, the Cauchy criterion, actually does converge.

So, in particular, if we have an infinite series that meets the Cauchy criterion, then it converges, in particular, there is real number for it to converge to.

The cases where the simple local algorithm for NMF does not converge to near global optimization are provably uninteresting to begin with.

So, with just that concept of distance, a Cauchy convergent sequence of E[X^2] finite random variables actually converges, that is, there is a random variable for the sequence to converge to.

Now I accept that there are cases where the short-term goals of a corporation maximising its shareholder value can converge with the goals of wider communities, and I'll even admit that there are times when communities can benefit from the actions of corporations, but it must be recognised that ultimately their goals diverge.

Converge definitions

verb

be adjacent or come together; "The lines converge at this point"

See also: meet

verb

approach a limit as the number of terms increases without limit

verb

move or draw together at a certain location; "The crowd converged on the movie star"

verb

come together so as to form a single product; "Social forces converged to bring the Fascists back to power"