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i‘m sure
@hyperjinx will love this, if he ever reads it
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tweeted this yesterday, went to bed. got up just now to what is by far the most successful tweet i ever set off. guess i now have to live with the fact that it‘s not something original i created, but a f@&%ing screenshot from reddit... i‘ll show myself out.pic.twitter.com/LRK0QOpRNY
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re-reading the original tweet, i guess i have to focus my tweetprode on the fact that i made a lot of people feel stupid.pic.twitter.com/100ZpeR9Lt
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thinking about it a bit more, this is the perfect example to illustrate the concept of »surprising obviousness« with.
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also, it is a great case to show we all switch off common sense (because this is what makes it perfectly obvious) when dealing with math.
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Wirklich nicht gekannt bzw gelernt?
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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Die ganze Diskussion erinnert mich auch ein bisschen an den Array- Zugriff in C... (Vermutlich aufwärts und in anderen Sprachen irgendwie auch). Auf das zweite Element von Array a kann mittels a[2] (wie gewohnt) oder 2[a] zugegriffen werden :-)
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What??? no, no way, that's ridiculous
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»a% of b« is calculated as b/100*a, which is equal to b*a*0.01, which again is equal to a/100*b, which can also be expressed as »b % of a«
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