When people say there’s been an “𝑥 fold increase in such and such.” They mean such and such is 𝑥 times as big.

If you get something that actually folds like a sheet of paper, the amount of layers doubles each time. One fold = twice as many layers. Two folds = four times as many layers…

    • sp3ctr4l
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      2 days ago

      Yeah, 'number’fold words in modern English are actually linguistic hold overs from before ‘fold’ was a verb that meant to bend something along a crease.

      https://www.etymonline.com/word/twofold

      In a whole bunch of proto-English languages, fold or feald or fald or falt were all multiplicative suffixes (basically) attached to a number, which made a new word meaning to multiply by the number.

      I’d be willing to bet this is also why the phrase ‘doubled over’ literally means that a person is bent, or folded at their abdomen.

      You take the new meaning of fold (to bend along a crease) but replace it with the word that twofold literally means (doubled).

      If you interpreted ‘doubled over’ as literally as OP is taking twofold, then the phrase should mean that a person was above something and then spontaneously grew a clone of themselves, or became twice as heavy or tall or something.

          • Zagorath
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            91 day ago

            It took me way too long to realise you weren’t asserting an unorthodox answer to the nondeterministic polynomial time problem.

            • sp3ctr4l
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              31 day ago

              haha sorry!

              My wrist is pretty messed up, and sometimes, it basically seizes up, so I went back to 15 yrs ago txt message dialect…

              And then after posting it I realized, oh that could be confused with… ah fuck it time to ice my wrist and do more massage.

          • @[email protected]
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            51 day ago

            I read that as “NP != D” and spent far too long trying to figure out what the variables N, P, and D were in this context.

      • @toynbee
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        32 days ago

        In case you’re not already a fan, I bet you’d like Robwords.

  • @Hawke
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    182 days ago

    I think you’re thinking about it wrong.

    The kind of fold here would be closer to Pleats not repeated bifolding.

  • mad_asshatter
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    182 days ago

    …and then Ben folds five shows up to ruin everything.

  • @roofuskit
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    92 days ago

    Etymology is your friend.

    • @thenextguy
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      82 days ago

      But it won’t pick you up at the airport.

      • @roofuskit
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        2 days ago

        Yes, but it’s a good enough friend to tell you when your idea is stupid. Just not good enough to pick you up at the airport or help you move house.

  • @CM400
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    92 days ago

    It is possible to fold a sheet of paper into thirds and get three layers…

    • @[email protected]OP
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      2 days ago

      But that would be two folds, and arguably two layers if the area of the middle section is bigger than the outer sections added together.

      • sp3ctr4l
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        2 days ago

        But you can fold the corners of a piece of paper, like dog earing the page of a book to make a quick bookmark, and unfolding that is very far from doubling the apparent, top down surface area.

        There are many ways of folding things that are not the very specific ‘fold in half’ or bifolding that you are envisioning.

        Ever made a paper airplane?

        Origami?

        Folded clothes?

  • @SpaceNoodle
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    52 days ago

    I agree, exponents are more powerful.

    I also use 2 when I’m talking about orders of magnitude.

  • @disguy_ovahea
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    2 days ago

    That’s only if you are folding the already folded paper. If you unfold after the first fold, then fold one of the halves in half, you’ll always end up with the number of folds plus one.

    That still doesn’t match the intended meaning of the analogy though.

  • @Zachariah
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    32 days ago

    Must the fold be exactly in half?
    What if I just fold a tiny corner over?

    • @[email protected]OP
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      22 days ago

      That would still be two layers. Although folding all the corners would allow four fold to equal two.

  • AmidFuror
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    22 days ago

    It’s a separate meaning of fold. Fifth definition for Merriam Webster.

    fold

    5 of 5 suffix 1 : multiplied by (a specified number) : times —in adjectives a sixfold increase and adverbs repay you tenfold 2 : having (so many) parts threefold aspect of the problem