What's The Longest Word You Can Write With Seven-Segment Displays?
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- Опубликовано: 7 окт 2018
- That's right, we're kicking Season 2 of the Basics off with a technical episode about a somewhat-obsolete technology! IT'S PARTY TIME. Wait, no, not party time. IT'S CODE TIME. Close enough.
Let's talk about seven-segment displays, and about the longest word you can write with them.
Public domain list of English words: github.com/dwyl/english-words
Thanks to my proofreading team, and to Tomek on camera!
The Cambridge Centre for Computing History: www.computinghistory.org.uk/
BONUS LINK:
Genius regex crossword puzzle: regexcrossword.com/
🟥 MORE FROM TOM: www.tomscott.com/
(you can find contact details and social links there too)
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Bonus question: what's the longest word you can spell just by turning a calculator upside-down?
Boobies??
How many digits?
Boobies depending in the length of the calculator.
Edit: also how the hell did a reply to a comment get 447 likes in a month
Oliebol
boobless
Tom: I and O are numbers with aspirations
S: *sweats nervously*
Right? That what I was thinking 😂
this is confusing
@@universenerdd An S in the 8 line format is the same as a 5
3
KSG ICON 😳😳
I would like it if the display said "Aarrgh" instead of "Error".
I've seen FAIL used before.
But would you prefer "Aarrgh" or "Aarrghh"?
There has been a AARRGH in the system
0 / 0 = Aarrgh
@@renakunisaki My cable box displayed FAIL a few seconds before displaying BOOT before rebooting!
I was hoping Tom would show us the word displayed in Seven-Segment Displays.
Right, that was a missed opportunity
Same
Probably didn't have a display long enough to show it. 🤷♂
@@destroy_television 🤦♂️ there is a font for seven segment displays to display it on any screen.
how about 'helper'?
I ran through the linuxwords list and I'm happy to include g - my result was "electroencephalography" which is quite a satisfying answer!
did you use python? because i used a library called "english-words" that got all of the words, and got the same answer as you.
here's my code:
import re; from english_words import english_words_lower_set
liste = []
for item in list(english_words_lower_set):
if not re.search('gkmqvwxz', item):
liste.append(item)
print(max(liste,key=len))
@@PL73 No, just some regex in Vim over the Linux words list. That Python library probably uses the same list!
Thank you for doing it the correct way for us!
@@PL73 you can replace the for loop with a list comprehension:
liste = [item for item in list(english_words_lower_set) if not re.search(‘gkmqvwxz’, item)]
If you're allowing 'g', then the longest is 'greatgreatgreatgreat[...]greatgrandfather'.
And you blue-ball us by not showing the word written out using a seven-segment displays...
FIX IT NOW, TOM!
Clickbait
Check out dseg on github you can see it for yourself
grassy climer Do you expect me to actually do something myself? I came here to enjoy myself and not do work!!!
jk ;) That's a really cool font
Its a video for the sake of uploading something. What do you expect ?
2:08 as a software developer i can confirm that. The most important skill you need is finding the right stackoverflow post that describes your problem the best.
I mean... you're not wrong
stop giving away our secrets XD
hey those are industry secrets you're giving away here
Amen.
Or proceed to ask it and defend it against close votes that people voted, apparently without looking.
Tom: "It doesn't matter that the 4 isn't the way most people write it"
Me: "They don't?? I do..."
Only way I know how to do it too.
That's how I was taught to write it some 50 years ago in school...
I got called a pretentious w**ker once because I cross my 7s so that people don't confuse them with my 1s (and I worked in a science job) ☹
@@Loctorak Write better se7ens dweeb
@@Loctorak Luke, write your sevens however makes you happy.
Ahh, the classic "leave it to the reader as an exercise".
>writes code and shoots video
>sends to editor
>"what happens if there's multiple correct answers tom?"
>"aarrghh"
How you gonna do this video and not show "supertranscendentness" on a seven-segment display?!
this is why the awnser is unsatisfying
@@coppertones7093 Also because S is the same seven-segment symbol as 5. S should be excluded for the same reason that g, q, i and o were excluded.
Shawn Willden well too bad, do the code yourself
@@TheDivegeek 4:02
@@Connie_TinuityError hyperbrachycephaly
"Programming is not remembering exact words or syntax: it is breaking down a problem, working out how to solve it, and then fixing all the inevitable bugs in your solution."
- Tom Scott
Sorry, i am amazed by this explanation of what programming is and i think it deserves to be quoted in the future too.
True. As someone who've only recently started getting into programming, I sure find it encouraging.
Also, a lot of people think you need to be good at math to be a programmer, which is not true.
@@Pedro-fh9ec Math and programming have 1 main thing in common - problem solving.
This is very true. Remembering Syntax is not as important as people think. It’s all about solving problems.
And I do NOT miss the old times when I start coding and we had to figure things alone.
0:29 Actually, in 1908 when the 7-segmented display was invented, cursive was by far the most common way of writing, and in cursive, the top of the four is separated just like in the 7-segmented display. You can actually look up notes from 1904 and you will all see them in cursive, and every time the year is written by hand (not by a stamp) the 4 is separated at the top. So we haven't "gotten used to it" but instead we have drifted away from using cursive. The more you know! And in case you were wondering, I write the top of my fours separated, and that's what got me down this rabbit hole.
I always write my 4 like that.
I write my fours like this, and my cursive is decent. Got taught it and I'm never going back; it's like my ideas just flow onto the page!
G is not allowed because it looks like a 9, but S is totally fine even though it's exactly the same as a 5. arbitrary rules are arbitrary.
Ding!
+1
Like a 9?
q doesn't even look like a 9
G (6) should have been allowed for mathematical consistency (1, 5, 6, 0) all letters that are alphanumeric in appearance
@@iamillasfuck not to mention, words don't have integers in them, thus, no confusion between letters and integers will occur anyhow.
"Did I know all that code off my heart? No, of course not - I Googled..."
Giving away our dirty secrets, I see.
StackOverflow Gang
By the way, Google is better at searching for something on StackOverflow than StackOverflow itself
@@theparrot271 ye
@@theparrot271 same with almost all sites/forums
everyone knows it lad, do not worry.
Supertranscendentness seems like a perfectly satisfying answer to the question though
I don't think it is a word many people have ever used
✴️
@@andrewmurphy5310 But its not some weird medicinal term either, and it is fitting, supertranceding all other words on the list.
Can I just ask how do you make letter T there
@@AlFredry Lower case t in seven segments = both left and lower two centre segs on, the rest off
“What’s the longest word you can write on a 7 digit display?”
Me an intellectual: hehe boobies hehe
Me a superior intellectual: Boobieless
@@ItsDavieman me an overlord: boobiesboobiesboobies
It's not seven digits, it's seven SEGMENTS. There are seven available line segments to create a number/letter
@@obiequack4490 yea sorry I missed that
pootis
Just shouting into the void as this is years on since the video was posted: I was playing with some 7-segment displays recently and had this exact problem as I needed to output words that used the forbidden characters. Technically we could print every character (upper and lowercase and a fair bit of punctuation) if we were "flexible" in how the letters looked. Map each bit to a segment and we could represent every character from 1-128. So if you're ever in a position where you needed to communicate with someone using only 7-segment displays but needed to write "wax kumquat in gauze" then it's perhaps a workable solution.
I will definitely report back if I'm ever in that position
me, using 16 segments, maybe dot matrix: hehe i dont have your pesky 7-segment issues B)
q is out cause it looks like a 9. **five seconds later** S is alright.
thought that was dumb the 9 in calculators looks different too
S looks like a 5
@Oliver T. yes
@@YellowToad you don’t say
@@YellowToad ok sherlock
Me: Wants to know what is the longest word with seven-segment display
You: Teaching me how to program
1K+ and no comments? Sehddd
Exactly
aaa
Pay attention, this *will* be on the test
Im not teaching you how to code? What the hell...
Fun fact: AARGH is a valid word in Wordle. Go ahead, try it out.
what I can’t believe it actually worked
Ok but wordle doesn’t mean it’s right 😂
Really? And WHY
I’ve only just found this channel and Tom answers questions I was never gonna have but will always be happy as hell to have learned
Som Tcott
In case if you don't know, "Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane" is shortly called DDT. The stuff we used to eliminate ants.
And there is a chemist's limerick centered around it as well.
A mosquito was heard to complain
That a chemist had poisoned his brain
The cause of his sorrow
Was para-dichloro-
diphenyl-trichloroethane
@@DeCeddy that is honestly hilarious, madlad was like "this kills bugs, limerick material"
also killed baby eagles i think
And the longer paradichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane should obviously be in the list.
I think it is banned in several parts of the world because of its health effects.
I love how "a", "aa", and "aaa" are all official English language words
Aaa? Aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa 'aaa' aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa. Aaa aaa aaa, 'aaa' aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa, aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa.
They describe the level of something, like AA batteries or AAA baseball
aa
Aaa
*AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA*
There are no official English language words.
ok boomer
I want to learn computer science and my knowledge for programming is really low, but it makes me so happy that I immediately understood how the code worked and the purpose of each line, if course with extra help of the explanation. Really cool!
I thoroughly enjoyed this one. You made me remember why I studied programming more than 30 years ago ... even though I never used my knowledge, it still gives me a thrill. Thanks
>not how most people write a four
*Aggressive confusion*
I write fours like that, but typically with lines protruding out a bit. I don't write it like 4.
It depends on the country and language I guess. Here this is the standard writing for four, not like the '4'. And 7 has a dash in the middle of it to clear confusion with 1 which is written with that dit at the top like it's written here.
@@NickJerrison I'm one of the few Americans who write a 7 and z with a line through it. Being an electrical engineer it really clears up my bad hand writing at times :)
Will Pereira z with a line through it? i havent ever seen such madness
@@torb1trick415 Z with a dash on the diagonal line is the standard for Z, the same goes for small q it has a dash trough the vertical line. at least where I live
By far the most important part of programming is remembering not to delete that one little bit of code you've left untouched for three years because it somehow manages to remain integral to the entire program despite not being referenced by anything.
wanna talk about something?
Did you mean Telesto?
coconut.png
@@sambennett2319 how dare you reference our lord and savior in this manner... this shall not go unpunished
@@charlesblasini2134 nah, 2fortcow.png
I love these videos where you explain pieces of code, step by step. Especially where you reassure coding noobs like myself, that it's more about knowing how to solve problems, than how to memorise actually coding techniques.
Well, no, it is actually extremely important that you learn coding techniques. You absolutely need to know when to use if statements, loops, arrays, objects, etc. etc. The part that he's referring to that you don't NEED to memorize is the exact syntax or keywords, because you can always look those up. But if you can't look at a problem and say "okay I can solve this with a for loop that checks against a regex and pushes to an array, let me just google how Python implements arrays", then you need to study more. Googling your specific problem and just copy-pasting code you don't understand from StackOverflow is not a good solution.
Never knew Tom would be more approachable for beginners than Stack Overflow 👍
I loved that you mentioned that programming is not knowing all the syntax for every library and framework by heart, it's all about problem solving. I often see people being ashamed of looking up the documentation all the time to execute some basic methods but it's not abot memorizing, it's about using the right tools and comign up with good solutions
Amen to this!
I took computer science at high school. Our large practical assignment which was supposed to be worth 20% of our grade ended up getting thrown out because of large scale cheating throughout the country. They finnaly realised that not even professionals are expected to figure out an entire project from memory alone and I believe you are now allowed to use google
@@vincento_squishI'd love to know. What country is that
Programing is w3school & stackOverFlow, prove me wrong.
@@indopak_ web programming u mean?
S is a 5 so you should put it in the variable “badLetters”
Then it would just be "badletter" :(
Lowercase I and O exist (no dot needed for i)
Thought your thing about making the code readable was interesting so I tried to make the shortest versions of the code possible in python! Here it is at 105 bytes:
print(max((A for A in open('a').read().split()if not{*A.lower()}&{*'gkmqvwxzio'}),key=len,default=None))
Racked my brain for awhile but couldn't think of a decent way to make it shorter if any of you want to try I wish you luck!
PS: I renamed the words.txt file "a" as python will still open it as a str.
I think the "C with aspirations" makes a solid G, and if I and O are removed then S has to be too.
If you remove S and add back in G "hyperbrachycephaly" is your new longest word
@@kiwihour333 If you remove S and *don't* add back in G 'hyperbrachycephaly' is still your new longest word.
Exactly. My microwave has a grill function that is displayed as "G" on a 7 segment display. It's a perfectly legit way to write it. I don't get why Tom thinks it's not a "G".
@@kiwihour333 if remove 's' and add 'g' you get hyperbrachycephaly aswell as phenylacetaldehyde and ultrabrachycephaly. Also if you include hyphens, you get 'three-and-a-halfpenny' which is equal to the longest word anyway (if you include the hyphens as characters).
Lowercase i and o are fine, completely unambiguous. S is definitely not.
I love how he's constantly trying to justify and shield himself from elitist programers
How do you mean?
“elitist”
tbf those fuckers are scary
he's intentionally making himself seem less experienced so that actual beginners find the video more approachable.
Was it intentional that nearly every letter has a similar form in seven segment formatting?
My guess is that a good way to handle multiple words of the same length, is throw any words of equal length (that satisfy the test) into a list, and clear the list if you've found a longer acceptable word
Based on my limited programming experience, I think that'll work well.
Yes, this would be the correct approach to this. I actually wrote a piece of code (in Java) with exactly this addition because I was curious to find out if there is any other words that would be valid and of the same length - There aren't, in case you were wondering
2:10 thank you for this little tid bit of advice. It genuinely changed how I feel about myself and my progress and made me feel better tbh. Thank you
I actually write my fours the way that seven segment displays show them.
@Érik I always wrote them like that, I always found the other way weird!
Same!
Everyone who does that is a proper wrongin
@@Green-pn7kq Same!!!!
@@ilikemen2736 ok i like men27
Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane was just fine. "i" and "o" should count: remember your classic "Error"? There's and "o" there no one had ever problems with
Y
@@dustikelly6730 y
Is that a name of a rocket fuel?
@@typicalfish1116
Looks like some sort of plastic.
(thought it'll also work as rocket fuel)
toxic, was used as an insecticide... until more than the insects started dying.
Tom taught me more about programming in this one video than my IT teacher has in 3 years
I love how you explain programming! It explains why I have trouble with the abstract tasks!
I and o should count. Written as half height they are not mistaken as 1 and 0
How exactly does S count again? It's literally just a 5...
I does count
@@soldierofkazus you think it's a 5 because most things that used numbers use this 7 light display and they used 5 as that even though it looks more like an s just not as curvy
fenafeses But a G is disallowed for looking the same as a 6
@@WhereWeRoll because in 6, the line connects back at the line but in G it doesn't
3:47
Seven Segment Display: *displays goal*
People: Oh, 6OAL!
You mean 60AL?
60Д1_
"Oh, 60AL!"
60 all
6041-
Actually, you can display two "I"s in one block.
And double lower case “L’s”
Thank you Tom, i really loved what you said about being a programmer and still looking things up, i think it's important to tell people that, you don't have to be able to do everything perfectly out of memory.
Thank you for this video!
Those "aarrgh"s are valid in Scrabble, for what it's worth.
Both are wrong!!
Completing "aarrghh" after someone spelled "aarrgh" is a powermove.
There are sorts of questionable words that are _allowed in scrabble._
The good old Buchstaben-YOLO.
Only in the pirate version of Scrabble, though.
Gotta say... I'm deeply disappointed that you didn't display the solution in 7-segment characters...
Nethertheless, gr8 work
Thanks for making me feel a bit better today, i was crying an hour before i watched your video and i subbed
I know it's old but I'm loving this series.
I wanted to see that word on a 7 segment display.
same
N word?
@7:05 "but I reckon for things like this it's fine"
All of software development in a nutshell.
Randall Stephens my internship in a nutshell
Randall Stephens That’s life in a nutshell
as a CS student half way through his studies (and from personal projects), I can confirm this. :P It is better to find a trivial solution that works, and then improve it from there (ofc, if you can think of the most optimized right off the bat, congrats, implement it).
HP hardware design team: why not build alphanumeric LED displays
I‘ll refactor that later 🙃
Thanks, Tom!
Good note on Big O notation. What I use as a rule of thumb, if your dataset is smaller than 1000-ish or run less than once every minute, you can probably ignore performance. And if you can't, your prototype will be slow enough that you can find it out before deployment.
"It's not a G, it's a C with aspirations"
So in other words, it's a \kʰ\?
(Linguistics joke)
@@Superb17C nice.
@@Superb17C lmao
@@Superb17C no? it's a /c
ʰ/. Or a /sʰiː/ I guess.
@@Superb17C as a mathematician, I see K to the power of h
*"OH LOOK IT'S SIX OAL"*
*"OH LOOK IT'S SIXTY AL"*
When I see 6LACK, I keep thinking SIX LACK instead of BLACK.
GixQine
*OH LOOK IT'S SIXTY NINE*
After seeing the green screen video I'm still 🤯 about how well they figured out the lighting n his positioning...bravo 👏
Very interesting video. Thank you.
0:56 You display the word "Error" which contains the letter "o". It has it's own unique set of segments that differentiates it from the number "0"; therefore, you incorrectly included "o" in var badLetter.
DEO also S is just a 5, so that should have been excluded
I
o is not included in var badletters
@@YakobMakel it is. Look here - 8:06
As well as n and u being easily depicted with 3 segments
"Can I borrow your Mega Processor?"
"Ha, noooo."
*"I'm Tom Scott."*
[notices red shirt]
"Ok, but be sure and mention us a few times in your video."
I think i like your content so i will subscribe. It seems very interesting
this vidoe tought me a little bit about programming and a weird and extremely trivial nerdfact i can use and even demonstrate with this video.
Such a missed opportunity to show the final words using 7-segmwnts displays. That why I was watching the whole video for. Im gutted!
Same....
codepen io has a version of it
@@LambentLight00 codepen io has a version of it
Tom Scott: the unofficial Vsause 4
so true
Arrête, nazi
this comment has 444 likes, 4 comments and has the number 4 in it
@@Slferon Your comment has 4 likes.
Your explaination is brilliant. Please do make the video about Big O notation. Thanks for this video.
Tom is a heck of a presenter!
The bonus upside down calculator question gives a much more satisfying answer:
bibliologies glossologies
531607055016
531607017818
And it's relevant too!
Or if you don't include 'g', it's hillbillies
Genius!
Calculator writing is behglios
Try typing in 7134-9315
Eh. A lowercase "o" should be fine, it's not duplicating the 0 in shape.
This is actually a good interview question.
I learn more in these videos than ive learned in the last 11 years ive been in school
The question: "What is the longest word you can write on a seven-segment display"?
The answer: A
You only gave me a single seven-segment display.
Bruh
Or 65535, the max value of the WORD datatype.
You can’t write an A on a seven segment display, it would have to be I instead
@@rat.tar.tar.8359 You can write A on a seven segement display
@@rat.tar.tar.8359
_
|_|
| |
This is an "A", isn't it?
I think the logic for ruling out "G" (because the number 6 already uses it) should also rule out "S" (because the number 5 already uses it).
At least the 'S' is structurally accurate. The 6 loops back and actually touches the left line. The brain just struggles to accept that as a G.
great then do it yourself
@@mikepictor in that case, lower case g is spot on.
Yes, but I think the 'G' that doesn't connect like a 6 is very readable, and a lowercase g is also readable.
@David: not really, lowercase g goes partially bellow the line. Its 7-segment version doesn't, making it look more like 9 than g.
Thanks for the reassurance in the coding section :)
The G was fine. So are I and O!
I simulated a 7-seg display in a program I made ages ago. I sat and thought out how to do as many letters as possible on it since some words would be helpful to display. It was a bit of a time-sink to figure out, really... one wouldn't have expected it to be so complicated.
Som Tcott
> teach programming concepts so beginners understand
> regular expressions
choose one
lmao
You never get good at regex. It's regex gods who decide when you are worthy
Isn't the entire point of being a begginer using things without really understanding how they work? The point is that a begginer can use that code, and edit it, and it should work as they expect. I admit I have no idea what regular expressions are. However, the code shown does not in any way confuse me.
Regexes aren't deep voodoo. Er, unless you make big complicated regexes, in which case you're probably doing something wrong. Good code and readable code have a very high rate of overlap(*), so if a piece of code looks like deep voodoo, it was likely written by someone who wasn't very good at what they were doing.
* In terms of Venn diagrams, the circle for "good code" is mostly contained within the circle of "readable code".
@@matek9975 Trust me, when you work in the abuse department of a major webhosting company and have to write regex to filter spam you'll "git good" at regex or die trying. The real regex gods all sit in such departments. Whenever there is a fresh wave being pushed through a number of mailservers which have a 100 Gbps pipe you have to be fast at writing regexes or a) your customers get pissed about too much spam or b) you'll end up being blacklisted by other ISPs. And then you have to deal with limited regex engines that don't allow backreferences etc. And spammers are very creative in bypassing your regexes... so if you want to learn how to use regex in the real world... work at the abuse department of an ISP. :D I hated regexes before that, now I love them :D
0:30 what do you mean most people don't write 4 like that? I've always written 4 like that.
For real. I'm so confused by that.
4
Maybe it's a UK/us thing?
Same for me.
Usually vertical an horizontal line cross
2:30 I write in java almost daily, and a common thing near the start of a program is "public static void main(String []args)" and I constantly mess up the order of the last 3 things
As a Python programmer, I was impressed when I was thinking of how to manufacture words with loops, and you just check if the “no” letters are in it.
Just did this as an exercise in PYTHON using the GERMAN dictionary and adding ä, ü and ö to the badLetters. The longest german word to write on a SEVEN-SEGMENT DISPLAY is "Schnittstellendefinitionssprachen" which translates to interface description languages. Or, if we exclude i and o as well, it would be "Altersstufenentsprechenden".
Maybe you could show us how it looks like on a seven segment display
Yeah, that would be nice
*what* it looks like* goddammit!
Don't you think DDT is too long for a 7-segment display? Yes it is
@@aurelia8028 How are you so upset about?
@@aurelia8028 how it looks like. What it looks like. How do you mean. What do you mean.
English vs american
7-segment displays are so delightfully 80s, and I love that.
I suspect that it's still on the alarm clock on granny's nightstand!
I like watching videos like this it makes me feel smart
something is missing,
you didn't show us that "supertranscendentness" in seven segment types
Wasted opportunity to not show the word in seven-segment fonts
*_ALL_* of the text should have been in a 7-segment display font! Some letters just require creativity, like M divided between 2 displays, or, use the display in the "Speak and Spell" as a font.
You _could_ write any English word on a 7-segment display if you wanted to. You'd just need to create a cohesive alphabet. Some letters might not look like their normal written counterparts, but that's fine.
As for Q, a lowercase Q in 7-segment wouldn't be ambiguous with a 9 since a 9 in 7-segment has its full tail. I could be made unambiguous by making it lowercase, while S and Z could by simply taking the top and bottom segments away and leaving zig-zags in opposite directions from each other. O just needs to stay lowercase.
That was fun, Thanks
I saw you in Dublin Airport today getting stuck in security. I wanted to say hi but airports are stressful enough. Hi!
username checks out, wrong person tho
Should have just waved wildly and grinned like a maniac, definitely not-stress-inducing at worst, and amusing at best.
Wait, why does the “n” have to be full height?
@real gamer why not to write it half the height though?
@@88Timur88Bahmudov88 you could but that just isn't the way it is
as same as "c"
Why does it matter?
It doesn't matter you're still using up one seven segment display whether you write a small n or a big n so it will not affect the question of word length as you cannot alter the number of characters you are using by changing the size of one of those characters. Unless you have some other reason I haven't considered which I cannot imagine you do.
As old as this video is the “don’t be afraid to look stuff up” still stands true. From doctors to engineers to students doing homework, if you’re not sure don’t be afraid to ask or look it up.
As someone who learned to program (it wasn't called coding back then) in 1976 in BASIC I found this fascinating.
Tom: What is the longest word you can make in 7 segments?
Me: Boobies?
_Boooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooobies_
No-one:
Calculator during maths:
8008135
actually 5318008
I figured outhow to spell shell oil on a calculator in school. Oh I was so proud.
@DispelTheMyth but it's less funny
I love this series.
Real Engineering love your channel
Not verified!
Tom is great at this. If you want gritty engineering details then Technology Connections will strip a DVD down to its chipset. But if you want to have a little fun while learning something new: Tom is the guy.
what are you doing here 😂😂
Jebediah Kerman its him....
Gotta say, I loved that bit with the flashy 'K' at around 4:00. Thanks for always making videos worth watching, Scott!
i like every video of this guy
"Don't be afraid to look stuff up" I wish someone told me this a few years sooner
Here's the longest hundred words that you can write with seven-segment displays:
(note, supertranscendentness is actually the only one of that length.)
supertranscendentness
supersuperabundantly
superrespectableness
unapprehendableness
supertranscendently
supersuperabundance
untranslatableness
untranscendentally
unsupernaturalness
ultrabrachycephaly
hyperbrachycephaly
phenylacetaldehyde
supersuperabundant
understandableness
superadaptableness
subtransparentness
unattractableness
unadulteratedness
preternaturalness
unrepresentedness
characterlessness
unpreternaturally
unpresentableness
unprecedentedness
unpersuadableness
leadenheartedness
hypertranscendent
feebleheartedness
pentadecahydrated
hyperbrachycephal
hyperaccurateness
blunderheadedness
tenderheartedness
supertranscendent
untransparentness
structurelessness
superaccurateness
superabstractness
unsurpassableness
unassessableness
unascendableness
schlauraffenland
unrebuttableness
unappeasableness
unappealableness
unacceptableness
unabstractedness
unpreferableness
unparalleledness
beetleheadedness
hypersensualness
transplacentally
hypernaturalness
translatableness
transferableness
transcendentness
transcendentally
platystencephaly
archpresbyterate
falseheartedness
hypercarburetted
pentadecahydrate
pentaphylacaceae
ununderstandably
ununderstandable
untranscendental
untenantableness
unsuspectfulness
unsupernaturally
naphthanthracene
undetestableness
unsufferableness
unsuccessfulness
underspurleather
underrepresented
bulletheadedness
undependableness
undepartableness
undefendableness
undefeatableness
supersulphureted
superrespectably
superrespectable
supernaturalness
preterpluperfect
dunderheadedness
stucturelessness
subbrachycephaly
unsearchableness
supercapableness
superblessedness
sunnyheartedness
uncensurableness
uncalculatedness
uncalculableness
unbreathableness
unbreachableness
unreturnableness
unrespectfulness
subtransparently
Bonus content: Here's the code I used to find this list:
var fs = require('fs');
var words = fs.readFileSync('words.txt').toString().split('
');
var badLetters = /[gkmqvwxzio]/;
words = words.sort((a, b) => b.length - a.length);
words = words.filter(a => !a.match(badLetters));
console.log(words.slice(0, 100).join('
'));
@@FC-mv4hy Clever!
Just getting into coding and stuff (how do you call it?), and the more I see the more I love it.
Personally, I'd probably disallow the ones that double up the "super", but that could just be an example of my blunderheadedness.
Cadwaladr If we’re going to keep adding rules like this, it’s going to be the same complexity as taking into account time zones.
Supersuperabundantly
I appreciate that this is secretly a tutorial on how to get started writing a computer program.
Thanks Scott.
Now I can't unsee the fact that I write the 4 like the seven segment display does.
“No ones gonna look at it and see 6OAL”
Me, whos been half listening and just glanced at it: 6oal???
isn't there a letter in the cyrillic script that looks like a 6 though?
Edit: yup, б
@@dominikbylina9957 Б
I saw "60 AL" there.
Memento Mori
Memento Mori
If you are dropping ‘i’ and ‘o’ as they are numbers 1 and 0 also need to drop ‘s’ as it is 5
Also z is 2
his reasoning seems weirdly inconsistent to me, lowercase o doesn't look similar to any number, while S is 5 as you said. Also that capital G without the crossbar seemed quite clear, and a 9 and q are clear since the bottom segment is off with the q.
Dropping o also doesn't make sense as usually 0 and o are displayed differently in seven segment displays. o is nearly always displayed with only the bottom 4 lines making a small o compared to the taller 0.
The original question was, "what is the longest word". Since words are made of letters, you can exclude digits and reuse the 7-segment digits /[015689]/ for letters.
Just Amazing...!
Super interesting!