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This is not a habit, however it's a real life example of practical implementation of computer theory (thanks, Don K, for the great books you've written :)

Army service (there are countries where it is obligatory, you know), and I and a mate are faced with ~1200 soldier cards that must be sorted by yesterday by captain's orders. Thankfully, the key was a 6-digit number. The mate was worried how long it would take, but I had Vol.2 fresh in my mind :)

So I made ten stacks for digits 0-9, and I divided the cards based on the last digit. Packed them, repeated for the second-to-last digit. And so on.

The procedure took about 30 minutes with a steady pace, and then we sat and had a pleasant relaxed, calm time. Obviously (for everyone who's been in an army), when the captain dropped by about 4 hours later ready to start shouting, we said, "oh, we just finished."

(Community wiki because even if you like it, I wouldn't deserve the rep)

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This is not a habit, however it's a real life example of practical implementation of computer theory (thanks, Don K, for the great books you've written :)

Army service (there are countries where it is obligatory, you know), and I and a mate are faced with ~1200 soldier cards that must be sorted by yesterday by captain's orders. Thankfully, the key was a 6-digit number. The mate was worried how long it would take, but I had Vol.2 fresh in my mind :)

So I made ten stacks for digits 0-9, and I divided the cards based on the last digit. Packed them, repeated for the second-to-last digit. And so on.

The procedure took about 30 minutes with a steady pace, and then we sat and had a pleasant time. Obviously (for everyone who's been in an army), when the captain dropped by about 4 hours later ready to start shouting, we said, "oh, we just finished."

(Community wiki because even if you like it, I wouldn't deserve the rep)

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