Oh, and the reason I poked my head in this thread in the first place: according to the Buffista Calendar, May 19, 1997 was the founding day of the first Buffy thread in TT.
What Happens in Natter 35 Stays in Natter 35
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Also, shrift, Yahoo Mail is being a phenomenal bitch, so, in short:
Yeah, I figured. I went ahead with the cheaper flight. Your plan sounds good. If you get a chance, go ahead and get the room for Thurs-Sunday, and we can adjust later if necessary.
Really? You don't always round up? Huh.
Technically, no, 3.965 would round to 3.96.
Rounding up from five is not common knowledge?
Rounding up from five is common knowledge where I went to elementary school, dammit. This "round from five to the even number" business is entirely too crazy for me. Also, get offa my lawn.
Jesse, where were you in 2nd grade? you didn't learn that rule?
OK, waitaminnit here. Rounding up from five is not common knowledge?
Dag, people, did you not read -t's post??
There is an actual rule of rounding that if you are rounding from a 5 you go to the even number.
She's saying you don't ALWAYS round UP from 5, you round to the EVEN NUMBER.
People put their GPAs on their resumes? I had no idea.
Signed,
Clueless Fine Arts Major
Happy birthday, Buffistas!
There is an actual rule of rounding that if you are rounding from a 5 you go to the even number
This is a weird rule. Is it new? Did I forget something this big?
OK, thanks for the clarification Jesse. I have never heard that before and am suspicious without someone explaining the rationale.
I can't find any confirmation of my rule, but it's what I was taught. If you always round 5s up, you introduce a bias that is eliminated if you round to the even number, because half the time its up and half the time its down.
Aha, found a reference. Microsoft calls it Banker's Rounding: Banker's rounding rounds .5 up sometimes and down sometimes. The convention is to round to the nearest even number, so that both 1.5 and 2.5 round to 2, and 3.5 and 4.5 both round to 4. Banker's rounding is symmetric.