How many than




















Create a free Team What is Teams? Learn more. Asked 10 years, 10 months ago. Active 1 year, 5 months ago. Viewed k times. Suppose John has 5 sweets.

Is there any difference between the following two sentences? Jack has 3 times as many sweets as John. Jack has 3 times more sweets than John. Improve this question. Sven Yargs k 30 30 gold badges silver badges bronze badges. Dusty: I'd say that this confusion you mentioned comes from the fact that many people use "3x more" to mean "3x as many", with the result that nobody can trust common logic any more when interpreting similar phrases.

I wish people were machines! Wait, no. Wait, yes! That would help with dating too. I don't believe "X times more" is ambiguous. On the other hand, "three times as many more" would indeed be ambiguous. People are increasingly speaking of "three times less", which just makes my head hurt. I think they mean one third. It would be better to say "I have impossibly-many apples" perhaps. And that should match your intuition from the example you gave: it is impossible to multiply zero by any number that would be large enough to make it equal to Zero is unique in this respect: any other number, no matter how big or small, can be multiplied by some other number to get But not zero.

Sign up to join this community. The best answers are voted up and rise to the top. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group.

Create a free Team What is Teams? Learn more. Ask Question. Asked 9 years, 11 months ago. Active 7 years, 3 months ago. Viewed 2k times. Cobold Cobold 3 3 gold badges 9 9 silver badges 22 22 bronze badges. Hope it's ok. Good, I'm glad we got that settled. Ask your friends and family members to help you with ideas. Ready to google? If you've never used the Google search engine before, give it a whirl. Type in your name, for example.

What results does the search engine give you? Are any of them about you? Can you find information about someone who shares your name? How quickly can you find the answer using Google? There's much more to Google than just its search engine, though. Try one of these other fun features and see what you can learn!

Did you get it? Test your knowledge. Wonder Words googol googolplex exponent power base google infinity mathematical function noun verb zero pattern multiply Take the Wonder Word Challenge. Join the Discussion. Luke Skywalker Feb 13, Hey wonderopolis can you tell me how the movies are made plus can you make a movie yourself.

Feb 17, Rocky Jan 21, Jan 22, Wondering person Mar 13, I wrote googol down on paper and it took me five minutes! Mar 13, Nov 5, Well, does anyone know a person that has counted up to the number googol, or maybe higher? That's a great question, halle! Brandon Sep 24, Anthony Aug 8, Its Aug 9, Is that zeroes, Anthony? I think that our web page may have cut some of them off!

Apr 30, It is 1,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Mar 19, Steve Bobs Apr 13, I WONT!!! Apr 17, Jan 5, Techy Sep 22, Sep 23, That's so many zeroes, it doesn't fit on our webpage, Techy! Thanks for giving it a shot! Techy Oct 9, Lol really? I only had to copy and paste 10 times!

Oct 9, Jul 21, Thanks for visiting Wonderopolis! May 6, SANS Apr 15, Apr 15, SANS Apr 28, May 5, Very creative, SANS! Thanks for stopping back by Wonderopolis! I thought googol was a number like this Hi, temmie! A googol is a number, but it's a number that has 1 followed by zeroes! Apr 20, SANS May 2, Welcome back, SANS!

It sounds like Undertale is very popular! Apr 22, Apr 11, Thanks for sharing, sans! That's definitely a large number! Sans Apr 11, Apr 12, This number is getting BIG, sans! Apr 8, Apr 5, Apr 4, That's right, Wonder Friend! Thanks for reading the Wonder so closely!

Great work! Is that a pattern we see in your numbers? Jessica Mar 14, Mar 16, Nov 20, Wilfred Kube Jun 17, Trying to Understand BIG numbers — Part 7 Astronomers tell us that our galaxy, the Milky Way, is about , light years in diameter, which is approximately 10 to the 13th kilometres.

The Milky Way galaxy is not very thick, when compared to its diameter, but we have been on a fantasy voyage, viewing a sugar planet from the comfort of a spaceship. If we could possibly imagine that the Milky Way was a giant sphere, , light years in diameter, it would have the volume of approximately 10 to the 38th cubic kilometres, big enough to contain 10 to the 26th sugar planets, and would contain about 10 to the 56th grains of sugar.

And so, lamentably, I think I am going to have to give up on trying to explain how big a googol is, because it is still 10 to the 44th times bigger than our Sugary Galactic monster planet. Wonderopolis Jun 17, Can you imagine that you are an astronaut, looking down at an amazing sight — a sugar planet the size of the earth!

This sugar planet would contain 10 to the 30th grains of sugar. You can trust me that the maths are correct. Can you believe it when I say that we have hardly started yet in visualising a googol? Trying to Understand BIG numbers — Part 5 Can we comprehend how many sugar grains are in this kilometre high sugar stack? Well, how can we imagine something bigger? The diameter of the earth is about 12, kilometres or 8, miles, and we can do a bit of maths to calculate how many cubic kilometres are equivalent to the volume of the earth.

The earth is approximately 10 to the 12th cubic kilometres in volume, and is definitely not made of sugar cubes!! We will need thousands of truck loads of these pallets of sugar, because I want us to imagine a thousand pallets side by side, making a row one kilometre long, along one side of our paddock.

After we complete that first row, we need to make another rows, because I want us to imagine the whole paddock covered with a layer of sugar pallets. We need to use a bit more imagination now, because I want us to imagine building a tower now, containing layers of pallets, and each layer containing one million pallets. Trying to Understand BIG numbers — Part 1 When we hear mention of large numbers, it is often difficult to comprehend exactly how big they are. There are much bigger numbers than a million, a billion, or a trillion.

But when it comes to really large numbers, such as a googol, how can we imagine just how big that number is? Trying to Understand BIG numbers — Part 3 We could make a packet of sugar cubes, with ten layers of sugar cubes, where each layer was made up of ten rows, and ten sugar cubes in each row. This packet, measuring ten centimetres wide, and ten centimetres high, would be exactly one litre in size, containing sugar cubes — and actually — one million sugar grains.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000