Have you seen the pervious video? In that video, I explained how to do point doubling and addition. You can use those concepts and the algorithm described in this video, to go to 26P.
@@AdvancedMath Yes sir. Got the answer 26P = (8,15). I had made a calculation mistake earlier. Thanks to your videos I did well on my exam. Thank you very much sir.
What a great algorithm, the use of the table made it very clear! Thank you for your videos, Professor.
Awesome lecturer. Hats off
Спасибо большое благодаря вам сдал лабораторную работу по защите информации 😅
Thanks. It took me a while to find this explanation
You are welcome.
Preparing for my exam, but this algorithm was not at all clear in my lecture. Thanks a lot for explaining it in such a clear way sir.
Thanks for your appreciation.
Great explanation, thanks!
BEAUTIFUL EXPLANATION
Thank you for the video and the channel overall. :)
Thanks for your appreciation.
Nice Explanation
can you give me example to this algorithm siar
Thanks for the video, I just don't understand how I would go from there with an actual point. How can I get 26P with P (2,15) for example?
Have you seen the pervious video? In that video, I explained how to do point doubling and addition. You can use those concepts and the algorithm described in this video, to go to 26P.
@@AdvancedMath yes, thanks I got it now. Great videos, thanks so much
Nicely explained, thank you Sir
You are most welcome.
Obtained Final result of (d) 26P = (2,15)
No, for P(5, 11), 26P should be (8, 15). Try again!
@@AdvancedMath Yes sir. Got the answer 26P = (8,15). I had made a calculation mistake earlier. Thanks to your videos I did well on my exam. Thank you very much sir.
Why did you write nP = P?
I have not written nP=P but nP=?
Thank you!
You are welcome.
Thank you
Sir can you explain it more?
Not sure what more to explain. This video when combined with the previous videos provide good enough explanation.
Sir
ты ахуенный
You are very nice man
Thank you.