Or at least IT thinks it is...
Try this program out. You will need the .NET Framework. If you don't have it, run Windows Update.
What was the rule? Thall shall not devide by zero?
I came up with this program TRYING to get a .Net application to crash so I could see what the crash box looked like. I tried data-type errors but the IDE kept finding them before compile. So I thought, have the user enter a number and devide by it. Then try zero. Well what do you know... I always thought anything devided by zero was undefinined... But I guess I was wrong. Try for your self!
I guess if you have .NET it doesnt even download and it just runs... Um... No?
*SPOILER!!!* For those who don't have Windows, the anwser to "5 / 0" is "Infinity". Any thing devided by zero is infinity. Whatever. Maybe we need new math teachers, or at least Microsoft thinks so.
Try this program out. You will need the .NET Framework. If you don't have it, run Windows Update.
What was the rule? Thall shall not devide by zero?
I came up with this program TRYING to get a .Net application to crash so I could see what the crash box looked like. I tried data-type errors but the IDE kept finding them before compile. So I thought, have the user enter a number and devide by it. Then try zero. Well what do you know... I always thought anything devided by zero was undefinined... But I guess I was wrong. Try for your self!
I guess if you have .NET it doesnt even download and it just runs... Um... No?
*SPOILER!!!* For those who don't have Windows, the anwser to "5 / 0" is "Infinity". Any thing devided by zero is infinity. Whatever. Maybe we need new math teachers, or at least Microsoft thinks so.