sure, but a large one?
- 0 Posts
- 227 Comments
Looks awesome. And I’m not even British.
It also looks like a heart attack, but so does hamburgers
wait D was not the correct answer?
wait, does windows jit compile C++ ??
4.5% of the population are psychopaths. 1.4% have a degree in maths.
coincidence?
neither are cartilages, yet they’re a part of the skeleton
FiskFisk33@startrek.websiteto memes@lemmy.world•To the one person who keeps forcing this site down our throats7·1 month ago???
Now I want to know what flibbar is
FiskFisk33@startrek.websiteto Programmer Humor@programming.dev•I'm gonna refactor later.16·1 month agobut it removed half the point…?
i know this is a joke, but i find it quite interesting those two words have completely different etymologies.
Grave as in burial site comes from an old proto indo european word for “dig”, while grave as in serious comes from french.
I mean, sure, you won’t stay alive for very long with a stopped heart.
I meant like, when someones heart stops and gets restarted again with cpr or a defibrillator or something. People often call that being dead, and coming back.
people say quitting smoking is hard. I don’t understand, I do it multiple times a day.
I know this is a definition in many places. I find it stupid and useless.
The heart beating is not a good definition of being alive in my opinion. The heart stopping temporarily doesn’t mean you died, you were just in terribly grave danger.
If a person is defined by their heart, what does that make a heart transplant?
utterly useless definition.
oh god the reason is even stupider then I expected
Because large numbers use the
e
character in their string representation (e.g.,6.022e23
for 6.022 × 1023), usingparseInt
to truncate numbers will produce unexpected results when used on very large or very small numbers.parseInt
should not be used as a substitute forMath.trunc()
.
or, like, a whole egg
They are more similar that at least I used to think.
https://youtu.be/bt7nC52GrmM