0 โ
1 ๐
2 โ๏ธ
3 ๐
4 ๐
74ReplyHey, fourck you too, man.
26ReplyWell, 132 you!
10Reply
6 โ๏ธ
17 ๐ค
18 ๐ค
19 ๐ค
28 ๐
31 โ
13Reply1 ๐
2 ๐
3 ๐
4 ๐
5 ๐
6 ๐
-2Reply
If you count in binary you can get to 31 on one hand, and 2,047 on two hands
39ReplyI'm not flipping you off, i just counted to 4
19 is the rock and roll symbol
22 is the shocker
Assuming you use your thumb as the first bit
14ReplyI taught my kids how to do it and for a while they'd tell each other to binary four off
12Reply
It really turns into Naruto style ninjitsu.
7ReplyOne hand would be 2**5 = 32 (0 to 31) and two would be 2**10 = 1024 (0 to 1023).
And if you use 3 states per finger (down, half raised and raised), you can have 3**10 = 59049 (0 to 59048).
4ReplyI don't count to 1024 over often (literally never) so I don't feel the need to go to trinary.
2Replynah, you can have 16+8+4+2+1 = 31 on one hand, and 1024+512+256+128+64+32+16+8+4+2+1=2047 on two hands.
1Reply
Nah. 1,2,4,8,16... or 1, 10, 100, 1000, 10000, depending on how you look at it.
13ReplyYou use more than one finger at once.
3ReplyI don't know many people who count like ๐โ๏ธ๐, so you kinda already do. You're just allowing more combinations
2Reply
Someone is confusing indices and cardinality.
9ReplyIf you count finger joints and tips, using your thumb โ you can count in hex (base16) on each hand.
5Reply๐คฏ wow, that's a neat idea! That might come in handy some time ๐ค
1Reply
Base 5 is based
5ReplyThe French used to count in base 20 (so that means both hands and both feet), which is why they read 97 as quatre-vingt-dix-sept, ie
4*20+10+7
. 6ReplyOne of the reasons why I hate learning French so much.
3Reply
coworker taught me this and it blew my mind. I had previously jokingly used base 2 with my hands, but something like 01001 10010 would be difficult to handle.
1ReplyBase 2 should be easy to add, but it requires effort to convert
2Reply
Don't you mean base 10?
Also, clearly seximal is the best
1ReplyBinary is better than seximal, unless you rig the tests.
1Reply
"Please count to 10."
"... um, I've run out of fingers."
4ReplyYou only need two fingers for that though
2Reply
THERE ARE FOUR LIGHTS!
4ReplyHonestly, I count using the four fingers for 1-4, close the fingers and extend thumb for five, then extend each finger again for 6-9.
The right hand counts tens and works the same way. Can count to 100, and it's pretty intuitive. It's like if positional notation was discovered way earlier.
3Reply0; 1; 2; 4; 8
2Reply0 1 10 11 100
2ReplyI've watched Inglorious Basterds I'm not falling for that trick
2Reply0, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, etc.
1ReplyLUN is life.
1ReplyI literally did this the other day... to be fair, it was a list starting with the number zero.
1Replycounting != indexing
1ReplyHaaaaaang on is that why we start on 0...
1ReplyNo. We count start at zero because the array already starts with an element of a specific size. Starting at 1 would always skip that initial element.
5ReplyYou could have "empty arrays" in a language if you wanted. The real reason is that you start with an offset of zero as you read an array from memory at hardware level, and so this way address is just "start address + element size * element number".
8ReplyNo, we start counting at one. We start indexing at zero.
An array with one element has an element count of 1, and that element would be at index 0.
4Reply
Because if you convert it back to binary, you have 0x0000 and that is one extra bit you can use instead of limiting your available values.
0Reply
Fun fact: when learning some instruments (e.g. bowed instruments) you also number the fingers starting from your index (because you don't play with the thumb)
1ReplyAKschually, thumbs aren't fingers.
-2Reply