Isn’t this just dependent on the level of abstraction? At the low level a CPU is just a calculator.
Presumably the user has a way to enter these digits. If they’re using a touchscreen, then there’s plenty of algorithms being used to make sure the intended touch target is triggered, even if they touch something in between.
There’s a lot of effort into making sure the user gets the intended result even if their input is fuzzy.
Isn’t this just dependent on the level of abstraction? At the low level a CPU is just a calculator.
Presumably the user has a way to enter these digits. If they’re using a touchscreen, then there’s plenty of algorithms being used to make sure the intended touch target is triggered, even if they touch something in between.
There’s a lot of effort into making sure the user gets the intended result even if their input is fuzzy.
Articulate the utility of a calculator that provides the response of “5” to “2+2.”
Well, it’s propping up the US economy right now…
Are you just being purposefully dense?
Are you?
No. But there’s no point in talking to a troll.
I’m not trolling. Much like Babbage, I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such questions.
Then perhaps you should contemplate about how users view technology.
Like magic, apparently.