>studying algorithms
>this comes out
>>(kudos to you if
you can recall what happened each year)
>couldn't recall everything, my autism kicks in and I must find out
Could you, /his/? Bonus point if you aren't American.
Well, the only hard one is 1804, probably the purchase of Louisiana
>>923030
That's my first guess as well, but it was in 1803.
Non-American here.
Easy
1918
1941
1945
2001
Guessable
1492
1776
1865
Had to check out
1783
1804
1963
>1918
[spoiler]WW1[/spoiler]
>1941
[spoiler]WW2[/spoiler]
>1945
[spoiler]Nuking japan[/spoiler]
>2001
[spoiler]Melting steel beams[/spoiler]
>1492
[spoiler]Columbus sailed the ocean blue[/spoiler]
>1776
[spoiler]Revolution[/spoiler]
>1865
[spoiler]Marvel's Civil War[/spoiler]
>1783
[spoiler]Change to federal form of government?[/spoiler]
>1804
[spoiler]Louisiana Purchase[/spoiler]
>1963
[spoiler]Black rights[/spoiler]
Just set the years chronologically
>>922992
Hey, I'm not a smart man. What is this algorithm stuff I keep seeing here? I mean, I know what an algorithm is, but I don't get how it applies to history, like in op's pic.
>>923134
It doesn't apply to history. It's like when a word problem in math talks about John buying 30 watermelons and then he gave 20% away how man does he have now. It's just filler for the purposes of teaching the actual mathematical concept.
>>923066
>had to check out 1963
>>923127
It's actually Kennedy's assassination
1804 was Lewis & Clark.
1783 I'm fairly certain was the end of the Revolution
>>923363
Yeah 1783 is the Treaty of Paris.
>>923363
>Lewis & Clark
How is that "important"?
>>923548
They're america's culture heroes
>>923314
Give him a break. Only Vietnam war naturally comes in my mind.