Radix in a sentence as a noun

Also known as a radix tree, I believe.

Maybe his grandmother had a job with punch cards: The old punch card sorter used radix sort.

The Gleason bound is only for sorting by comparing pairs of keys, and radix sort doesn't do that.

]For this reason always specify a radix when using parseInt.

The Chord algorithm sounds like a very good choice, however I'm more skeptical about the radix tree approach.

In a more general algorithm, this radix should be seen as a parameter of the analysis.

This is a lot more cache-friendly than radix trees, which have better theoretical performance but often touch memory that's all over the place.

Is the OP bitter about the fact that any teenager with a web browser can now learn how to write a radix sort whereas he had to go to university to learn it?

> Decimal floating point would hardly affect accuracy compared to binary floating pointThe larger the radix, the more of the mantissa is wasted.

Different implementations produce different results when a radix is not specified.

Your denominator doesn't divide any power of your radix, so your representation has to be either infinite, or inaccurate.

Radix definitions

noun

(numeration system) the positive integer that is equivalent to one in the next higher counting place; "10 is the radix of the decimal system"

See also: base