Imagine you're eating candies, some come in packs where you can count each one, and others are like a big bag you just pour out and eat as much as you want.
Discrete is like having a candy pack with 10 pieces. You can count them: 1, 2, 3... up to 10. Each piece is separate, no half-candies or tiny bits in between.
Continuous is like a big bag of candies that never ends. You just keep eating until the bag is empty. There's no stop, it’s always flowing, like water from a tap.
Counting vs. Flowing
- Discrete things are countable, you can name them one by one.
- Continuous things are unlimited, they flow and never stop, like sand through your fingers.
So when something is discrete, it's like counting on your fingers. When it's continuous, it’s more like a river, always moving and never ending. Imagine you're eating candies, some come in packs where you can count each one, and others are like a big bag you just pour out and eat as much as you want.
Discrete is like having a candy pack with 10 pieces. You can count them: 1, 2, 3... up to 10. Each piece is separate, no half-candies or tiny bits in between.
Continuous is like a big bag of candies that never ends. You just keep eating until the bag is empty. There's no stop, it’s always flowing, like water from a tap.
Examples
- Counting apples in a basket is discrete, but measuring the height of a growing plant is continuous.
- Stairs are discrete steps, while walking on a smooth road feels continuous.
- Your age is discrete (you turn 10 all at once), but your height grows continuously over time.
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See also
- How big is infinity dennis wildfogel?
- How Does 1.2 Algebraic Models Work?
- How Does Abstract Algebra: The definition of a Group Work?
- How Does Comparison: Every Number To Infinity (& Beyond) Work?
- How Does Both are one - From Zero to Infinity Work?