Is this a float/string vs integer thing, or did someone forget which way the alligator teeth go?
Software Gore
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You should also check out these awesome communities!
- Tech Support: For all your tech support needs! (partnered)
- Hardware Gore: Same as Software Gore, but for broken hardware.
- DiWHY - Questioning why some things exist...
- Perfect Fit: For things that perfectly and satisfyingly fit into each other!
maybe the alligator wasn’t very hungry
Why not both?
Inspect element most like.
… case 91: return true; case 92: return true; …
My god 😂😂
This dev failed first grade math when he can’t distinguish between < and >
bigger number go on bigger side of triangle. smaller number go on smaller side of triangle!
I memorized it like this:
Add another stroke to < and it becomes 4, smaller number Add another stroke to > and it becomes 7 (if you cross it in the middle like I do), greater number
I learnt it as "the mouth tries to eat the biggest number, so it faces towards the biggest number"
Wow, that's complicated xD
When you put numbers around it becomes really obvious.
1<2 = 1 is lower than 2. 1<2<3<4<5<6<7 4>3 = 4 is greater than 3. 9>8>7>6>5>4>...
Taking the test too carefully like that is suspicious and may cause cops to search you
Try a comma? The programmer might be European.
Well, the original post reads:
"On the Tennessee online practice test"
So it shouldn't be a comma anyways.
It's Tennessee so it's possible that the invention of punctuation marks hasn't made it's way there yet. Source: Am from the South
Bruh
I'm from Italy but I've no problem writing 5.6 or 5,6... Better yet, I prefer the dot to the comma, it feels more "universal"
It's a disabled text field being used to display the test result, not something the user can edit without also modifying the page's code in their browser.
It takes a while to understand new math.