← Back to context Comment by dragonwriter 5 days ago No, 0.1% is one in 1,000. 0.03 is (approximately) one in 3,000; one in 30,000 is 0.003% 8 comments dragonwriter Reply ViscountPenguin 5 days ago You're off by an order of magnitude with those last two. mediaman 5 days ago Double check your math. All of their posts in this thread are correct.1/30,000 * 100 = .003 ViscountPenguin 5 days ago Oh, fuck freakynit 5 days ago /r/TheyDidTheMath IYKYK dotancohen 5 days ago If it makes you feel more comfortable, throw another significant digit at GP's decimal. Make it a 3 like the previous digit. Now multiply. monster_truck 5 days ago Hey man your computer has a calculator try using it next time roland_nilsson 5 days ago Can't we use Claude to figure this out
ViscountPenguin 5 days ago You're off by an order of magnitude with those last two. mediaman 5 days ago Double check your math. All of their posts in this thread are correct.1/30,000 * 100 = .003 ViscountPenguin 5 days ago Oh, fuck freakynit 5 days ago /r/TheyDidTheMath IYKYK dotancohen 5 days ago If it makes you feel more comfortable, throw another significant digit at GP's decimal. Make it a 3 like the previous digit. Now multiply. monster_truck 5 days ago Hey man your computer has a calculator try using it next time roland_nilsson 5 days ago Can't we use Claude to figure this out
mediaman 5 days ago Double check your math. All of their posts in this thread are correct.1/30,000 * 100 = .003 ViscountPenguin 5 days ago Oh, fuck freakynit 5 days ago /r/TheyDidTheMath IYKYK
dotancohen 5 days ago If it makes you feel more comfortable, throw another significant digit at GP's decimal. Make it a 3 like the previous digit. Now multiply.
You're off by an order of magnitude with those last two.
Double check your math. All of their posts in this thread are correct.
1/30,000 * 100 = .003
Oh, fuck
/r/TheyDidTheMath IYKYK
If it makes you feel more comfortable, throw another significant digit at GP's decimal. Make it a 3 like the previous digit. Now multiply.
Hey man your computer has a calculator try using it next time
Can't we use Claude to figure this out