base 10
base 10

base 10

Alien has 4 fingers...nice touch
You mean 10 fingers
Oh, you must be using base 4. You see, Phoenix alpha uses base 10.
all your base are belong to us
A true classic. My only regret is that I cant link it in the original shockwave.
Maybe I can help then:
https://archive.org/details/allyourbase
There are only 10 types of people:
the ones that expected a binary joke, and
the ones that expected a ternary joke, and
the ones that expected a quartenary joke, and
...
...and all of them are using base 10.
We have N fingers, naturally.
And it works just as well, if we reverse the roles:
🪨🪨🪨🪨🪨
🪨🪨🪨🪨🪨
🪨
Human: There are 11 rocks.
Alien: Oh, you must be using base A. See, I use base 10.
Human: No, I use base 10. What is base A?
Roman : There are XI rocks.
(hexadecimal)
Based.
This post made me decide to go to sleep because I'm too fucking tired for this shit
Thanks
1, 2, 3, 10, 11, 12, 13, 20, 21, 22, 23, 30…
So should I be saying base 9+1?
for that one alien, you may say :
"base 3 + 3 + 3 + 1"
For universal other sentient beings, say :
"base 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1
+ 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1"
"I'm 16, but in base 1, I'm 10000000000000000 years old. My ID just needs to be updated."
I think the best way I've seen was to just poke the number of holes in the dirt or draw a picture, labeling them until you get to your base switching moment.
Oh, sorry we're base 22
A base-neutral system for naming numbering systems (by jan Miseli) is my favorite solution for this problem.
Oh fuck oh shit I'm too high to handle this RN!
"You must mean Base 22"
Is this from the Hail Mary trailer?
Amaze! jazz hands
Correct
Base 1 is the only universal counting system.
They are using base 1111 and base 1111111111. Instead of digits, you can represent numbers using rocks, if needed.
Base 4 but indexes start at 1
My species uses e as its base because that is proven to be mathematically optimal. In our number system, humans use base 2.3025850... (but written entirely as powers of e using our far superior elegant notation, of course!)
The only true base is binary. I'm not even kidding, I still sometimes convert numbers to binary for the sake of simplifying operations if I'm tired. Have you ever tried calculating square roots in binary? It's shockingly easy compared to decimal.
Only works in written form. Unless the alien says the number as one-zero.
Also, in a bijective number system, every base is 11. (they don't have 0)
edit: not true, brainfart
There is nothing about 10 in its pronounced form that means it HAS to come after 9.
No. If you write 11 in base b, bijective number system or not, that's b+1, not b.