The number you are referring to is called a "googol." A googol is equal to 10 to the power of 100, or 1 followed by 100 zeros. It was first introduced by mathematician Edward Kasner in 1938 as a way to illustrate the concept of extremely large numbers.
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That's called a "googol." Yes, it's a real number, not just a typo. It's basically a 1 followed by a hundred zeros. So, if you ever need to count that high, now you know what to call it.
Oh, dude, that's like a googol. Yeah, you heard me right, a googol. It's like a one followed by a hundred zeros. Pretty crazy, right? But hey, who's counting?
The last answer was only half right. A googol is a 1 followed by 100 zeros. A googolplex is 10^googol. It is said that writing this number in long format, 10 pt font, would stretch across the galaxy. I tried writing a CPP program that would write it out, but I gave up after my laptop battery died. I'm pretty sure a long integer stops are 2*10^9, therefore it wouldn't be possible in any programming language that I know of. longest number most programming languages support = 2*10^9 googolplex = 1*10^100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
The rays are called sides and the common endpoint is called vertex.
The first number is called the minuend. The second number is called the subtrahend. The answer is called the difference.
It is called an Ampersand.
Then the number is called a "perfect square".Then the number is called a "perfect square".Then the number is called a "perfect square".Then the number is called a "perfect square".