drakide
drakide
436 / 15
15th Oct 2012
17th Jul 2014
mapS is the fourth SoC developed by Rawing and me. It offers 5 bit variables and is quite fast.
computer wooooooowww complex genius nerdinagoodway electronics program maps tiny programmable

Comments

  • sentinal-5
    sentinal-5
    24th Dec 2012
    oh wow, you must be identical twins or something... oh, and sorry for the triple comment yesterday.
  • MattF1
    MattF1
    24th Dec 2012
    I chose 25. It guessed 16, I said too low. Then it said 24, again too low. Then it said 28, I said too high, then 26, and I thought it would get my number on the next try. But when I said Too High, it said 9. I think this is a serious glitch.
  • happygirl
    happygirl
    24th Dec 2012
    WOW this is really cool <3
  • Rawing
    Rawing
    24th Dec 2012
    @Exxion: It keeps track of your own personal high score. The first time you play, a score of 1 is enough to reach high score.@RustyNinja: You'll be called a liar if you try that.@sentinal-5: No. We're siblings.
  • 0xFF
    0xFF
    24th Dec 2012
    @Sentilal, lol.
  • sentinal-5
    sentinal-5
    23rd Dec 2012
    oh yeah... and because this is your first save... you don't just get that good overnight...
  • sentinal-5
    sentinal-5
    23rd Dec 2012
    y'know, when you say 'developed by Rawing and me', partly because you bothered to put the capital R at the start of his name, and partly because of the way this is made, i reckon that only one person made this... are you Rawing?
  • sentinal-5
    sentinal-5
    23rd Dec 2012
    that's a smart computer, it got 7 in only 4 guesses!!!! i fav'd immediately, I LOVE IT!!!!! +1 :D
  • Plutonium
    Plutonium
    23rd Dec 2012
    I got 5 with 23.
  • Balkondeur
    Balkondeur
    23rd Dec 2012
    Great job, it's amazing! FYI, this is actually a commonly used algorithm to look up elements in a sorted list. Begin with the center element and determine whether the element that is looked for has a lower of higher number. If lower, do the same from the center number of the first half. If higher, the second half. And so on.