- Not to be confused with trootrol.
Tootrol is equal to \(10[3]30\) using Username5243's Array Notation.[1] The term was coined by Wikia user Username5243.
YouTuber Douglas Shamlin Jr called this number Trianta-taxis (Named from triantalogue).[2]
Approximations[]
Notation | Approximation |
---|---|
Arrow notation | \(10 \uparrow \uparrow \uparrow 30\) (exact) |
Bowers' Exploding Array Function | \(\{10,30,3\}\) (exact) |
Hyper-E notation | \(\textrm{E}1\#1\#30\) |
Fast-growing hierarchy | \(f_4(30)\) |
Sources[]
- ↑ Username5243. Part 1 - My Large Numbers. Retrieved 2021-06-22.
- ↑ D. Shamlin Jr., Ultimate List of Large Numbers - Part 1 of 4 | The Beginning! (Reuploaded by Dr2xmillion). Accessed 2022-05-30.
Megoogol · Meg-Googol · Meg-Doogol · Meg-Kiloogol · Meg-Kil-Googol · Meg-Dukiloogol · Meg-Trukiloogol · Dumegoogol · Dumeg-Googol · Dumeg-Kiloogol · Dumeg-Dukiloogol · Trumegoogol · Trumeg-Kiloogol · Tetrumegoogol · Pentumegoogol · Gigoogol · Gig-Googol · Gig-Kiloogol · Gig-Megoogol · Dugigoogol · Trugigoogol · Teroogol · Duteroogol · Truteroogol · Petoogol · Ectoogol · Zettoogol · Yottoogol · Xennoogol · Wekoogol
Note: The readers should be careful that numbers defined by Username5243's Array Notation are ill-defined as explained in Username5243's Array Notation#Issues. So, when an article refers to a number defined by the notation, it actually refers to an intended value, not an actual value itself (for example, a[c]b = \(a \uparrow^c b\) in arrow notation). In addition, even if the notation is ill-defined, a class category should be based on an intended value when listed, not an actual value itself, as it is not hard to fix all the issues from the original definition, hence it should not be removed.