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Thread 106359627

15 posts 12 images /g/
Anonymous No.106359627 >>106359781 >>106360576
Test icles
Test icles
Anonymous No.106359696
kek
Anonymous No.106359781 >>106359878
>>106359627 (OP)
You think you funny, OP?
Anonymous No.106359878
>>106359781
he is
Anonymous No.106360576 >>106360648
>>106359627 (OP)
I don't get it
Anonymous No.106360648 >>106360686 >>106360946
>>106360576
He's a robot who entered in the secret code to access the robot internet
Anonymous No.106360686 >>106360975
>>106360648
I...still don't get it
Anonymous No.106360946
>>106360648
I don't get it.
Anonymous No.106360975 >>106361019
>>106360686
It's because the robot is an LLM and hallucinated a 4 at the end of the answer.
Anonymous No.106361019
>>106360975
Anonymous No.106361025 >>106361177 >>106361227
Press F12 go to console and type

console.log(0.2+0.1);
Anonymous No.106361177 >>106361186
>>106361025
WTFFFFF DO NOT TYPE THIS AIIEEEE MY PC
Anonymous No.106361186
>>106361177
AAAAAAAAA NIGGERMAN SAVE MEEEEE
Anonymous No.106361227
>>106361025
Thank you, I knew there must have been a reason for the ..0.4

>This occurs due to the nature of floating-point number representation in computers. JavaScript, like many other programming languages, uses the IEEE 754 standard for representing floating-point numbers. This standard uses a binary (base-2) system, and some decimal numbers, such as 0.1 and 0.2, cannot be represented precisely in binary. They are stored as approximations. When these approximations are added, the result may not be exactly the expected decimal value, leading to a small discrepancy like the one observed.
Anonymous No.106361268
peny's