Hexadecimal Memes

Posts tagged with Hexadecimal

Mathematical Witchcraft

Mathematical Witchcraft
The mathematical blasphemy here is just *chef's kiss*. For those scratching their heads like Tom: 15+15=30 in base 10, but 16+16=32 in base 10. However, if you're calculating in hexadecimal (base 16), then 16+16 actually equals "20" (which reads as "thirty" in base 10). The meme brilliantly plays with number systems to create mathematical chaos that would make even the most composed mathematician twitch uncontrollably. It's basically numerical gaslighting for anyone who passed 3rd grade math.

Number Base Systems Alignment Chart

Number Base Systems Alignment Chart
What happens when mathematicians play Dungeons & Dragons? This alignment chart, but with number systems instead of personalities. Duodecimal (base-12) follows all the rules like a proper nerd. Hexadecimal (base-16) is just doing its computing job. Unary (base-1) is pure chaos—literally just ones all the way down. The chaotic evil "tree(3)" is basically mathematical nightmare fuel—a number so incomprehensibly large it makes Graham's number look like a rounding error. And that imaginary number "i" sitting there as neutral evil is perfect—it's literally the square root of negativity.

All Your Base Are Belong To 10

All Your Base Are Belong To 10
Behold! A tier list that would spark riots in any computer science department! It's ranking programming number systems by their letters, but the punchline is they're all Base 10! Because technically every number system is "base 10" in its own language - binary is 10 in binary (which equals 2), hexadecimal has 10 in hex (which equals 16), and so on! It's that mind-bending moment when you realize mathematics is just humans making up rules and then acting surprised when they work. The universal joke that separates the bit-counters from the byte-sized brains!

Mathematicians And Computer Scientists Vs Bases

Mathematicians And Computer Scientists Vs Bases
The numerical identity crisis is real! Base 10 (decimal) is where both mathematicians and computer scientists feel at home - just normal humans doing normal math things. But watch what happens when we switch systems! Base 2 (binary) reveals the true divide: mathematicians are having an existential breakdown with all those 1s and 0s, while computer scientists are smugly comfortable - it's literally their native language. Then comes Base 16 (hexadecimal) where mathematicians descend into complete numerical horror at dealing with letters as numbers, while computer scientists just put on their cool glasses and get to work. Nothing says "I understand memory addresses" like casually throwing around values like 0xDEADBEEF without breaking a sweat.