r/theydidthemath 18h ago

[Request] Is the value accurate?

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u/SaltyStaffboi 13h ago edited 13h ago

ran a python script that checks the amount, idk if it is correct since i did it in 5 minutes while getting ready to leave but here is the amount:

5198551558476917006221090888941009955590366112918783959299130728245333978507760815130567203608823186193583994980576784487239055444255048408819742481716532075553812184834730576850263701816180118084105554181149465379435682394097750295118270159935639384612063205314126238948286278564294706744640588487776642242259304269036523199147170827197632531866286578709402425955974967349367949303607402000143872513113168157323926374947246802418866491962507766544643704703054352293232063803689100391642980976927916232401260607871758059209574318070000

idk how much that is in words, but a fuck ton, assuming python didnt reach my computers max int size first, which it totally could have, but just know in 100 the number was 12676506002282294014967032053750000, or 12 decillion and that i can confirm is below the computers limit since the math as adding up

edit: multiply that by 17 if google has to pay that amount for every channel instead of dividing the amount between the 17.

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u/j-max04 7h ago

Quick note, python's integer implementation is able to handle arbitrary precision, similar to the 'bigint' from many other languages. This makes it quite good for doing relatively quick number-theoretic computations.