Is this a float/string vs integer thing, or did someone forget which way the alligator teeth go?
43 0 Replymaybe the alligator wasn’t very hungry
19 0 ReplyWhy not both?
6 0 ReplyInspect element most like.
7 2 Reply
… case 91: return true; case 92: return true; …
38 0 ReplyMy god 😂😂
3 0 Reply
This dev failed first grade math when he can’t distinguish between < and >
11 3 Replybigger number go on bigger side of triangle. smaller number go on smaller side of triangle!
3 0 ReplyI 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
2 1 Reply
Taking the test too carefully like that is suspicious and may cause cops to search you
7 0 ReplyTry a comma? The programmer might be European.
8 2 ReplyWell, the original post reads:
"On the Tennessee online practice test"
So it shouldn't be a comma anyways.
10 0 ReplyIt'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
8 1 ReplyBruh
3 0 Reply
Weird. I am in Europe, but I always find it weird to use the comma instead of the dot for decimals.
1 0 ReplyI'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"
1 0 ReplyIt'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.
1 1 Reply
It takes a while to understand new math.
5 0 Reply