Editing 2319: Large Number Formats

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As well as 'traditionalist' British use, the long scale is widely used in the non-Anglophone world, in local language versions, though while the British system tended to infill n-and-a-half powers of the million with the term "thousand n-illion", the suffix "-illi''ard''", or equivalent, is often used for the thousands multiple directly atop the respective "-illion" point.
 
As well as 'traditionalist' British use, the long scale is widely used in the non-Anglophone world, in local language versions, though while the British system tended to infill n-and-a-half powers of the million with the term "thousand n-illion", the suffix "-illi''ard''", or equivalent, is often used for the thousands multiple directly atop the respective "-illion" point.
 
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|2.526×10<sup>13</sup>
+
|2.526x10<sup>13</sup>
 
|Scientist
 
|Scientist
 
|This number is formatted in {{w|scientific notation}}, using the exponent 10<sup>13</sup>.
 
|This number is formatted in {{w|scientific notation}}, using the exponent 10<sup>13</sup>.
 
|-
 
|-
| 2.525997×10<sup>13</sup>
+
| 2.525997x10<sup>13</sup>
 
| Scientist trying to avoid rounding up
 
| Scientist trying to avoid rounding up
 
| Using as many decimal places as necessary until hitting a digit (0-4) that results in rounding down, even if it goes against the common scientific practice of reporting the correct amount of "significant figures". [[:File:large number formats.png|A previous version of the comic]] had a typo (the number was ''2.5997x10<sup>13</sup>''), but Randall updated the comic.
 
| Using as many decimal places as necessary until hitting a digit (0-4) that results in rounding down, even if it goes against the common scientific practice of reporting the correct amount of "significant figures". [[:File:large number formats.png|A previous version of the comic]] had a typo (the number was ''2.5997x10<sup>13</sup>''), but Randall updated the comic.

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