How to be good at coming up with counter example in TopologyCounter-example of an affirmationIs there a counter example?Sets and Logic .. Disproving with counter exampleProof by counter-examplePreserving compactness and connectedness implies continuity for functions between locally connected, locally compact spaces?Limit point Compactness does not imply compactness counter-exampleHow does the “arc tangent metric” $d(x,y) = | arctan(x) - arctan(y)| $ work?A List of Standard or “Cliche” Homeomorphismsproduct σ-algebra counter exampleCounter example

What is this word supposed to be?

Can I criticise the more senior developers around me for not writing clean code?

Why do distances seem to matter in the Foundation world?

Does a large simulator bay have standard public address announcements?

Mistake in years of experience in resume?

Find the identical rows in a matrix

Is it acceptable to use working hours to read general interest books?

Negative Resistance

"The cow" OR "a cow" OR "cows" in this context

How do I reattach a shelf to the wall when it ripped out of the wall?

Combinatorics problem, right solution?

Is there a word for the censored part of a video?

A faster way to compute the largest prime factor

Is there really no use for MD5 anymore?

What does "function" actually mean in music?

"Whatever a Russian does, they end up making the Kalashnikov gun"? Are there any similar proverbs in English?

What is the most expensive material in the world that could be used to create Pun-Pun's lute?

How to have a sharp product image?

Can a stored procedure reference the database in which it is stored?

Why do real positive eigenvalues result in an unstable system? What about eigenvalues between 0 and 1? or 1?

Do I need to watch Ant-Man and the Wasp and Captain Marvel before watching Avengers: Endgame?

std::unique_ptr of base class holding reference of derived class does not show warning in gcc compiler while naked pointer shows it. Why?

How do I deal with a coworker that keeps asking to make small superficial changes to a report, and it is seriously triggering my anxiety?

Why did Rep. Omar conclude her criticism of US troops with the phrase "NotTodaySatan"?



How to be good at coming up with counter example in Topology


Counter-example of an affirmationIs there a counter example?Sets and Logic .. Disproving with counter exampleProof by counter-examplePreserving compactness and connectedness implies continuity for functions between locally connected, locally compact spaces?Limit point Compactness does not imply compactness counter-exampleHow does the “arc tangent metric” $d(x,y) = | arctan(x) - arctan(y)| $ work?A List of Standard or “Cliche” Homeomorphismsproduct σ-algebra counter exampleCounter example













1












$begingroup$


This is a more generalized question, but does anyone have a set of tips or tricks to come up with distinctive examples and counterexamples in Topology and Analysis? More specific, how can people often come up with exotic sequence or mappings between spaces? I can understand the intuition behind some of the simple fractions in the by playing with simple fractions like $frac1n$, but it seems bizarre to me at this moment how people just come up with maps involving complex numbers, trigonometry between exotic spaces out of nowhere










share|cite|improve this question







New contributor




Joe Martin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$











  • $begingroup$
    This article addresses the general questions that surround yours: On teaching mathematics
    $endgroup$
    – avs
    4 hours ago















1












$begingroup$


This is a more generalized question, but does anyone have a set of tips or tricks to come up with distinctive examples and counterexamples in Topology and Analysis? More specific, how can people often come up with exotic sequence or mappings between spaces? I can understand the intuition behind some of the simple fractions in the by playing with simple fractions like $frac1n$, but it seems bizarre to me at this moment how people just come up with maps involving complex numbers, trigonometry between exotic spaces out of nowhere










share|cite|improve this question







New contributor




Joe Martin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$











  • $begingroup$
    This article addresses the general questions that surround yours: On teaching mathematics
    $endgroup$
    – avs
    4 hours ago













1












1








1





$begingroup$


This is a more generalized question, but does anyone have a set of tips or tricks to come up with distinctive examples and counterexamples in Topology and Analysis? More specific, how can people often come up with exotic sequence or mappings between spaces? I can understand the intuition behind some of the simple fractions in the by playing with simple fractions like $frac1n$, but it seems bizarre to me at this moment how people just come up with maps involving complex numbers, trigonometry between exotic spaces out of nowhere










share|cite|improve this question







New contributor




Joe Martin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$




This is a more generalized question, but does anyone have a set of tips or tricks to come up with distinctive examples and counterexamples in Topology and Analysis? More specific, how can people often come up with exotic sequence or mappings between spaces? I can understand the intuition behind some of the simple fractions in the by playing with simple fractions like $frac1n$, but it seems bizarre to me at this moment how people just come up with maps involving complex numbers, trigonometry between exotic spaces out of nowhere







general-topology examples-counterexamples intuition






share|cite|improve this question







New contributor




Joe Martin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|cite|improve this question







New contributor




Joe Martin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question






New contributor




Joe Martin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 4 hours ago









Joe MartinJoe Martin

185




185




New contributor




Joe Martin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Joe Martin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Joe Martin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











  • $begingroup$
    This article addresses the general questions that surround yours: On teaching mathematics
    $endgroup$
    – avs
    4 hours ago
















  • $begingroup$
    This article addresses the general questions that surround yours: On teaching mathematics
    $endgroup$
    – avs
    4 hours ago















$begingroup$
This article addresses the general questions that surround yours: On teaching mathematics
$endgroup$
– avs
4 hours ago




$begingroup$
This article addresses the general questions that surround yours: On teaching mathematics
$endgroup$
– avs
4 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















2












$begingroup$

For counterexamples, just think: "mission sabotage". In other words, deliberately try to break a given statement.



There are generally no "tips", "tricks", "recipes", or anything else of a universal caliber. (When there are, they are so valued that you will surely run across them.) Mathematics is an art as much as it is a science: one tries, examines for errors, and corrects if needed, as many times as it takes.



The best there is in the direction you are asking is learning a sufficiently rich arsenal of counterexamples. To help with that, Olmsted and Gelbaum have written Counterexamples in Analysis, which is a great and highly beneficial read.






share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    There is similarly a book titled Counterexamples in Topology. Also, it might help to think about what properties you are implicitly assuming when you try to come up with examples. E.g., Am I only looking at continuous functions? Differentiable functions? Increasing functions? Compact spaces? Subsets of $mathbbR^n$? Metric spaces? Hausdorff spaces?
    $endgroup$
    – kccu
    4 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    Thank you very much for the comment. This seems like an excellent book for me to start with. It is just I started taking my first algebraic topology course this semester, but I feel dull as every time I think about some possible theorem to prove, the stack-exchange community would just come up with bizarre (at least to me) counter-example in a short period that would take forever for me to verify.
    $endgroup$
    – Joe Martin
    3 hours ago


















3












$begingroup$

I think that it would indeed be odd for people to come up with exotic counterexamples to innocuous conjectures out of nowhere, as you say. Really, what is guiding those counterexamples is a lot of time and experience spent with problems and the material. When you are reading the statement of a theorem, try seeing what happens when you omit a hypothesis to see what may go wrong, and talk to people about it, either here online or in person to share your thoughts. The more you learn, the more connections you will make, and eventually you will begin to see more as you synthesize that knowledge.






share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$













    Your Answer








    StackExchange.ready(function()
    var channelOptions =
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "69"
    ;
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
    createEditor();
    );

    else
    createEditor();

    );

    function createEditor()
    StackExchange.prepareEditor(
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
    convertImagesToLinks: true,
    noModals: true,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: 10,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    imageUploader:
    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
    allowUrls: true
    ,
    noCode: true, onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    );



    );






    Joe Martin is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









    draft saved

    draft discarded


















    StackExchange.ready(
    function ()
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmath.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f3202542%2fhow-to-be-good-at-coming-up-with-counter-example-in-topology%23new-answer', 'question_page');

    );

    Post as a guest















    Required, but never shown

























    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    2












    $begingroup$

    For counterexamples, just think: "mission sabotage". In other words, deliberately try to break a given statement.



    There are generally no "tips", "tricks", "recipes", or anything else of a universal caliber. (When there are, they are so valued that you will surely run across them.) Mathematics is an art as much as it is a science: one tries, examines for errors, and corrects if needed, as many times as it takes.



    The best there is in the direction you are asking is learning a sufficiently rich arsenal of counterexamples. To help with that, Olmsted and Gelbaum have written Counterexamples in Analysis, which is a great and highly beneficial read.






    share|cite|improve this answer









    $endgroup$








    • 1




      $begingroup$
      There is similarly a book titled Counterexamples in Topology. Also, it might help to think about what properties you are implicitly assuming when you try to come up with examples. E.g., Am I only looking at continuous functions? Differentiable functions? Increasing functions? Compact spaces? Subsets of $mathbbR^n$? Metric spaces? Hausdorff spaces?
      $endgroup$
      – kccu
      4 hours ago










    • $begingroup$
      Thank you very much for the comment. This seems like an excellent book for me to start with. It is just I started taking my first algebraic topology course this semester, but I feel dull as every time I think about some possible theorem to prove, the stack-exchange community would just come up with bizarre (at least to me) counter-example in a short period that would take forever for me to verify.
      $endgroup$
      – Joe Martin
      3 hours ago















    2












    $begingroup$

    For counterexamples, just think: "mission sabotage". In other words, deliberately try to break a given statement.



    There are generally no "tips", "tricks", "recipes", or anything else of a universal caliber. (When there are, they are so valued that you will surely run across them.) Mathematics is an art as much as it is a science: one tries, examines for errors, and corrects if needed, as many times as it takes.



    The best there is in the direction you are asking is learning a sufficiently rich arsenal of counterexamples. To help with that, Olmsted and Gelbaum have written Counterexamples in Analysis, which is a great and highly beneficial read.






    share|cite|improve this answer









    $endgroup$








    • 1




      $begingroup$
      There is similarly a book titled Counterexamples in Topology. Also, it might help to think about what properties you are implicitly assuming when you try to come up with examples. E.g., Am I only looking at continuous functions? Differentiable functions? Increasing functions? Compact spaces? Subsets of $mathbbR^n$? Metric spaces? Hausdorff spaces?
      $endgroup$
      – kccu
      4 hours ago










    • $begingroup$
      Thank you very much for the comment. This seems like an excellent book for me to start with. It is just I started taking my first algebraic topology course this semester, but I feel dull as every time I think about some possible theorem to prove, the stack-exchange community would just come up with bizarre (at least to me) counter-example in a short period that would take forever for me to verify.
      $endgroup$
      – Joe Martin
      3 hours ago













    2












    2








    2





    $begingroup$

    For counterexamples, just think: "mission sabotage". In other words, deliberately try to break a given statement.



    There are generally no "tips", "tricks", "recipes", or anything else of a universal caliber. (When there are, they are so valued that you will surely run across them.) Mathematics is an art as much as it is a science: one tries, examines for errors, and corrects if needed, as many times as it takes.



    The best there is in the direction you are asking is learning a sufficiently rich arsenal of counterexamples. To help with that, Olmsted and Gelbaum have written Counterexamples in Analysis, which is a great and highly beneficial read.






    share|cite|improve this answer









    $endgroup$



    For counterexamples, just think: "mission sabotage". In other words, deliberately try to break a given statement.



    There are generally no "tips", "tricks", "recipes", or anything else of a universal caliber. (When there are, they are so valued that you will surely run across them.) Mathematics is an art as much as it is a science: one tries, examines for errors, and corrects if needed, as many times as it takes.



    The best there is in the direction you are asking is learning a sufficiently rich arsenal of counterexamples. To help with that, Olmsted and Gelbaum have written Counterexamples in Analysis, which is a great and highly beneficial read.







    share|cite|improve this answer












    share|cite|improve this answer



    share|cite|improve this answer










    answered 4 hours ago









    avsavs

    4,4151515




    4,4151515







    • 1




      $begingroup$
      There is similarly a book titled Counterexamples in Topology. Also, it might help to think about what properties you are implicitly assuming when you try to come up with examples. E.g., Am I only looking at continuous functions? Differentiable functions? Increasing functions? Compact spaces? Subsets of $mathbbR^n$? Metric spaces? Hausdorff spaces?
      $endgroup$
      – kccu
      4 hours ago










    • $begingroup$
      Thank you very much for the comment. This seems like an excellent book for me to start with. It is just I started taking my first algebraic topology course this semester, but I feel dull as every time I think about some possible theorem to prove, the stack-exchange community would just come up with bizarre (at least to me) counter-example in a short period that would take forever for me to verify.
      $endgroup$
      – Joe Martin
      3 hours ago












    • 1




      $begingroup$
      There is similarly a book titled Counterexamples in Topology. Also, it might help to think about what properties you are implicitly assuming when you try to come up with examples. E.g., Am I only looking at continuous functions? Differentiable functions? Increasing functions? Compact spaces? Subsets of $mathbbR^n$? Metric spaces? Hausdorff spaces?
      $endgroup$
      – kccu
      4 hours ago










    • $begingroup$
      Thank you very much for the comment. This seems like an excellent book for me to start with. It is just I started taking my first algebraic topology course this semester, but I feel dull as every time I think about some possible theorem to prove, the stack-exchange community would just come up with bizarre (at least to me) counter-example in a short period that would take forever for me to verify.
      $endgroup$
      – Joe Martin
      3 hours ago







    1




    1




    $begingroup$
    There is similarly a book titled Counterexamples in Topology. Also, it might help to think about what properties you are implicitly assuming when you try to come up with examples. E.g., Am I only looking at continuous functions? Differentiable functions? Increasing functions? Compact spaces? Subsets of $mathbbR^n$? Metric spaces? Hausdorff spaces?
    $endgroup$
    – kccu
    4 hours ago




    $begingroup$
    There is similarly a book titled Counterexamples in Topology. Also, it might help to think about what properties you are implicitly assuming when you try to come up with examples. E.g., Am I only looking at continuous functions? Differentiable functions? Increasing functions? Compact spaces? Subsets of $mathbbR^n$? Metric spaces? Hausdorff spaces?
    $endgroup$
    – kccu
    4 hours ago












    $begingroup$
    Thank you very much for the comment. This seems like an excellent book for me to start with. It is just I started taking my first algebraic topology course this semester, but I feel dull as every time I think about some possible theorem to prove, the stack-exchange community would just come up with bizarre (at least to me) counter-example in a short period that would take forever for me to verify.
    $endgroup$
    – Joe Martin
    3 hours ago




    $begingroup$
    Thank you very much for the comment. This seems like an excellent book for me to start with. It is just I started taking my first algebraic topology course this semester, but I feel dull as every time I think about some possible theorem to prove, the stack-exchange community would just come up with bizarre (at least to me) counter-example in a short period that would take forever for me to verify.
    $endgroup$
    – Joe Martin
    3 hours ago











    3












    $begingroup$

    I think that it would indeed be odd for people to come up with exotic counterexamples to innocuous conjectures out of nowhere, as you say. Really, what is guiding those counterexamples is a lot of time and experience spent with problems and the material. When you are reading the statement of a theorem, try seeing what happens when you omit a hypothesis to see what may go wrong, and talk to people about it, either here online or in person to share your thoughts. The more you learn, the more connections you will make, and eventually you will begin to see more as you synthesize that knowledge.






    share|cite|improve this answer









    $endgroup$

















      3












      $begingroup$

      I think that it would indeed be odd for people to come up with exotic counterexamples to innocuous conjectures out of nowhere, as you say. Really, what is guiding those counterexamples is a lot of time and experience spent with problems and the material. When you are reading the statement of a theorem, try seeing what happens when you omit a hypothesis to see what may go wrong, and talk to people about it, either here online or in person to share your thoughts. The more you learn, the more connections you will make, and eventually you will begin to see more as you synthesize that knowledge.






      share|cite|improve this answer









      $endgroup$















        3












        3








        3





        $begingroup$

        I think that it would indeed be odd for people to come up with exotic counterexamples to innocuous conjectures out of nowhere, as you say. Really, what is guiding those counterexamples is a lot of time and experience spent with problems and the material. When you are reading the statement of a theorem, try seeing what happens when you omit a hypothesis to see what may go wrong, and talk to people about it, either here online or in person to share your thoughts. The more you learn, the more connections you will make, and eventually you will begin to see more as you synthesize that knowledge.






        share|cite|improve this answer









        $endgroup$



        I think that it would indeed be odd for people to come up with exotic counterexamples to innocuous conjectures out of nowhere, as you say. Really, what is guiding those counterexamples is a lot of time and experience spent with problems and the material. When you are reading the statement of a theorem, try seeing what happens when you omit a hypothesis to see what may go wrong, and talk to people about it, either here online or in person to share your thoughts. The more you learn, the more connections you will make, and eventually you will begin to see more as you synthesize that knowledge.







        share|cite|improve this answer












        share|cite|improve this answer



        share|cite|improve this answer










        answered 4 hours ago









        Alex OrtizAlex Ortiz

        11.6k21442




        11.6k21442




















            Joe Martin is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









            draft saved

            draft discarded


















            Joe Martin is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












            Joe Martin is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.











            Joe Martin is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.














            Thanks for contributing an answer to Mathematics Stack Exchange!


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid


            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

            Use MathJax to format equations. MathJax reference.


            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function ()
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmath.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f3202542%2fhow-to-be-good-at-coming-up-with-counter-example-in-topology%23new-answer', 'question_page');

            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown





















































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown

































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown







            Popular posts from this blog

            یوتیوب محتویات پیشینه[ویرایش] فناوری‌های ویدئویی[ویرایش] شوخی‌های آوریل[ویرایش] سانسور و فیلترینگ[ویرایش] آمار و ارقامی از یوتیوب[ویرایش] تأثیر اجتماعی[ویرایش] سیاست اجتماعی[ویرایش] نمودارها[ویرایش] یادداشت‌ها[ویرایش] پانویس[ویرایش] پیوند به بیرون[ویرایش] منوی ناوبریبررسی شده‌استYouTube.com[بروزرسانی]"Youtube.com Site Info""زبان‌های یوتیوب""Surprise! There's a third YouTube co-founder"سایت یوتیوب برای چندمین بار در ایران فیلتر شدنسخهٔ اصلیسالار کمانگر جوان آمریکایی ایرانی الاصل مدیر سایت یوتیوب شدنسخهٔ اصلیVideo websites pop up, invite postingsthe originalthe originalYouTube: Overnight success has sparked a backlashthe original"Me at the zoo"YouTube serves up 100 million videos a day onlinethe originalcomScore Releases May 2010 U.S. Online Video Rankingsthe originalYouTube hits 4 billion daily video viewsthe originalYouTube users uploading two days of video every minutethe originalEric Schmidt, Princeton Colloquium on Public & Int'l Affairsthe original«Streaming Dreams»نسخهٔ اصلیAlexa Traffic Rank for YouTube (three month average)the originalHelp! YouTube is killing my business!the originalUtube sues YouTubethe originalGoogle closes $A2b YouTube dealthe originalFlash moves on to smart phonesthe originalYouTube HTML5 Video Playerنسخهٔ اصلیYouTube HTML5 Video Playerthe originalGoogle tries freeing Web video with WebMthe originalVideo length for uploadingthe originalYouTube caps video lengths to reduce infringementthe originalAccount Types: Longer videosthe originalYouTube bumps video limit to 15 minutesthe originalUploading large files and resumable uploadingthe originalVideo Formats: File formatsthe originalGetting Started: File formatsthe originalThe quest for a new video codec in Flash 8the originalAdobe Flash Video File Format Specification Version 10.1the originalYouTube Mobile goes livethe originalYouTube videos go HD with a simple hackthe originalYouTube now supports 4k-resolution videosthe originalYouTube to get high-def 1080p playerthe original«Approximate YouTube Bitrates»نسخهٔ اصلی«Bigger and Better: Encoding for YouTube 720p HD»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube's 1080p – Failure Depends on How You Look At It»نسخهٔ اصلیYouTube in 3Dthe originalYouTube in 3D?the originalYouTube 3D Videosthe originalYouTube adds a dimension, 3D goggles not includedthe originalYouTube Adds Stereoscopic 3D Video Support (And 3D Vision Support, Too)the original«Sharing YouTube Videos»نسخهٔ اصلی«Downloading videos from YouTube is not supported, except for one instance when it is permitted.»نسخهٔ اصلی«Terms of Use, 5.B»نسخهٔ اصلی«Some YouTube videos get download option»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube looks out for content owners, disables video ripping»«Downloading videos from YouTube is not supported, except for one instance when it is permitted.»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube Hopes To Boost Revenue With Video Downloads»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube Mobile»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube Live on Apple TV Today; Coming to iPhone on June 29»نسخهٔ اصلی«Goodbye Flash: YouTube mobile goes HTML5 on iPhone and Android»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube Mobile Goes HTML5, Video Quality Beats Native Apps Hands Down»نسخهٔ اصلی«TiVo Getting YouTube Streaming Today»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube video comes to Wii and PlayStation 3 game consoles»نسخهٔ اصلی«Coming Up Next... YouTube on Your TV»نسخهٔ اصلی«Experience YouTube XL on the Big Screen»نسخهٔ اصلی«Xbox Live Getting Live TV, YouTube & Bing Voice Search»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube content locations»نسخهٔ اصلی«April fools: YouTube turns the world up-side-down»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube goes back to 1911 for April Fools' Day»نسخهٔ اصلی«Simon Cowell's bromance, the self-driving Nascar and Hungry Hippos for iPad... the best April Fools' gags»نسخهٔ اصلی"YouTube Announces It Will Shut Down""YouTube Adds Darude 'Sandstorm' Button To Its Videos For April Fools' Day"«Censorship fears rise as Iran blocks access to top websites»نسخهٔ اصلی«China 'blocks YouTube video site'»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube shut down in Morocco»نسخهٔ اصلی«Thailand blocks access to YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلی«Ban on YouTube lifted after deal»نسخهٔ اصلی«Google's Gatekeepers»نسخهٔ اصلی«Turkey goes into battle with Google»نسخهٔ اصلی«Turkey lifts two-year ban on YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلیسانسور در ترکیه به یوتیوب رسیدلغو فیلترینگ یوتیوب در ترکیه«Pakistan blocks YouTube website»نسخهٔ اصلی«Pakistan lifts the ban on YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلی«Pakistan blocks access to YouTube in internet crackdown»نسخهٔ اصلی«Watchdog urges Libya to stop blocking websites»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلی«Due to abuses of religion, customs Emirates, YouTube is blocked in the UAE»نسخهٔ اصلی«Google Conquered The Web - An Ultimate Winner»نسخهٔ اصلی«100 million videos are viewed daily on YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلی«Harry and Charlie Davies-Carr: Web gets taste for biting baby»نسخهٔ اصلی«Meet YouTube's 224 million girl, Natalie Tran»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube to Double Down on Its 'Channel' Experiment»نسخهٔ اصلی«13 Some Media Companies Choose to Profit From Pirated YouTube Clips»نسخهٔ اصلی«Irate HK man unlikely Web hero»نسخهٔ اصلی«Web Guitar Wizard Revealed at Last»نسخهٔ اصلی«Charlie bit my finger – again!»نسخهٔ اصلی«Lowered Expectations: Web Redefines 'Quality'»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube's 50 Greatest Viral Videos»نسخهٔ اصلیYouTube Community Guidelinesthe original«Why did my YouTube account get closed down?»نسخهٔ اصلی«Why do I have a sanction on my account?»نسخهٔ اصلی«Is YouTube's three-strike rule fair to users?»نسخهٔ اصلی«Viacom will sue YouTube for $1bn»نسخهٔ اصلی«Mediaset Files EUR500 Million Suit Vs Google's YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلی«Premier League to take action against YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube law fight 'threatens net'»نسخهٔ اصلی«Google must divulge YouTube log»نسخهٔ اصلی«Google Told to Turn Over User Data of YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلی«US judge tosses out Viacom copyright suit against YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلی«Google and Viacom: YouTube copyright lawsuit back on»نسخهٔ اصلی«Woman can sue over YouTube clip de-posting»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube loses court battle over music clips»نسخهٔ اصلیYouTube to Test Software To Ease Licensing Fightsthe original«Press Statistics»نسخهٔ اصلی«Testing YouTube's Audio Content ID System»نسخهٔ اصلی«Content ID disputes»نسخهٔ اصلیYouTube Community Guidelinesthe originalYouTube criticized in Germany over anti-Semitic Nazi videosthe originalFury as YouTube carries sick Hillsboro video insultthe originalYouTube attacked by MPs over sex and violence footagethe originalAl-Awlaki's YouTube Videos Targeted by Rep. Weinerthe originalYouTube Withdraws Cleric's Videosthe originalYouTube is letting users decide on terrorism-related videosthe original«Time's Person of the Year: You»نسخهٔ اصلی«Our top 10 funniest YouTube comments – what are yours?»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube's worst comments blocked by filter»نسخهٔ اصلی«Site Info YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلیوبگاه YouTubeوبگاه موبایل YouTubeوووووو

            Magento 2 - Auto login with specific URL Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern) Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?Customer can't login - Page refreshes but nothing happensCustom Login page redirectURL to login with redirect URL after completionCustomer login is case sensitiveLogin with phone number or email address - Magento 1.9Magento 2: Set Customer Account Confirmation StatusCustomer auto connect from URLHow to call customer login form in the custom module action magento 2?Change of customer login error message magento2Referrer URL in modal login form

            Rest API with Magento using PHP with example. Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern) Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?How to update product using magento client library for PHP?Oauth Error while extending Magento Rest APINot showing my custom api in wsdl(url) and web service list?Using Magento API(REST) via IXMLHTTPRequest COM ObjectHow to login in Magento website using REST APIREST api call for Guest userMagento API calling using HTML and javascriptUse API rest media management by storeView code (admin)Magento REST API Example ErrorsHow to log all rest api calls in magento2?How to update product using magento client library for PHP?