1+1=
1+1=
1+1=
1+1=10
1+1 is usually 2, sometimes 3, sometimes 1. Rarely, 337.
Heck, you'd be surprised how often it's 0.
Makes sense. 1 day job + 1 night job = 0 money
There's a tolerance for error, it's within spec.
Yep. If your system explodes when 1+1=3, you'll have a smoldering crater by noon.
Its 11
I got 11...
If it's an elevator 1+1 may even be 4.
The secret to good engineering is to know when 1+1 should be 3 and when it should be 1.
Sometimes 1+1 is 2, like when you're counting stuff.
Sometimes 1+1 is 1, like when you just need a Boolean indicator of whether something is true. Pressing the elevator button multiple times should behave the same way as pressing the elevator button once. Planning out a delivery route requires a stop at every place with at least one item to be delivered, but the route itself doesn't change when a second or third item is added to that stop.
Sometimes 1+1 is 0, like when dealing with certain types of rotations, toggle switches, etc. Doing a 180° rotation twice is the same as doing it zero times. Same with doing a reflection transformation twice.
A good engineer understands the scope of what they're doing, and its limits.
For anyone else who needs a lil explaining to fully enjoy this:
This meme plays on the humorous tension between the perspectives of engineers and scientists, highlighting their different approaches to problem-solving and risk assessment.
This is the most ChatGPT thing I’ve read all day
It sounds like my response might have come off a bit formal or scripted. I'm here to provide information in a way that suits you best! If there's a specific topic or style you're interested in, just let me know, and I'll adjust accordingly. Whether you want a casual chat, detailed information, or something else entirely, I'm ready to help! What’s on your mind?
explaining over engineering with an over engineered answer, nice
ChatGPT, is that u?
Second one of these this morning.
This shit is going to destroy communication.
no u
Let's not degrade our humanity by using the atrocious llms kay.
I appreciate your candidness, you sassy little shit-muffin! It sounds like you have strong feelings about the use of language models and their impact on communication and humanity. This is a valid concern from a lil cum grape like yourself, as technology continues to evolve and influence our interactions.
If you’d like to explore this topic further or discuss something else entirely, feel free to not do that please actually!
Yo, I think your explanation could really be improved with some references, sources and links for further leisure-reading, imo
If you created this without the use of an LLM, you have a gift.
Petah
Engineers gotta respect reality. Scientists don't.
Let’s say 1+1=3.
Sir, I don’t think that’s right.
Let’s just say it is for safety.
But sir I don’t think you understand.
Just do it.
Alright boys you heard him, the bridge can hold 30,000 Lbs.
Scientists being theorists and not based in reality after all.
Engineers knowing it is necessary to ensure safety because "+" could mean something else in just this situation noone (especially scietists) thought about.
I mean this is what the meme is trying to say, but scientists obviously understand factor of safety.
The Demon Core is interested in your location.
So this maybe kills the joke, which made me laugh. In my personal experience, most engineers are part scientists, and scientists who study engineering are part engineers. I can say that at least a small handful of the scientists I've met who study engineering may not really understand why engineers use a specific safety margin for a specific purpose, they understand practically that it's because no one wants to come close to a things tolerance. Especially when public safety is concerned.
It's a joke though. It's hyperbole, and I thought it was funny.
If they did, they wouldn't need engineers.
But it's more of a division of labor I think.
It is the job of the scientist to discover a new idea. It is the job of an engineer to kill enough people to make the idea just safe enough to turn loose on the public.
Remember kiddies, scientific principles are written in ink. Engineering principles are very often written in blood.
1+1=3=e=π=√g=√10=c*10^-8
The Indiana Legislature would like to know your location
0.1 + 0.2 = 0.30000000000000004
c/foundtheprogrammer
But just for practically, we should let 0.1 + 0.2 ≠ 0.3.
Sooo, 1 + 1 = pi ?
I feel like the engineers set π = 3 meme is from like 50 years ago where you couldn't just punch π into your calculator
0.99999… = 1
Isn't that mathematicaly correct? It's a infinit series that converges on 1
No idea. I was going for how 1/3 = 0.3333…
, then 3/3 = 1 = 0.9999…
.
This. This is my world 😬
I learned binary math in college. I can prove 1+1=1
Do you mean 10?
In boolean algebra 1+1=0.
in binary modular maybe but not boolean
Rounding up