DeepSeek-R1-Distill-Qwen-32B-GGUF
12.2K
142
32.0B
1 language
Q4
license:apache-2.0
by
unsloth
Other
OTHER
32B params
Fair
12K downloads
Community-tested
Edge AI:
Mobile
Laptop
Server
72GB+ RAM
Mobile
Laptop
Server
Quick Summary
See our collection for versions of Deepseek-R1 including GGUF and original formats.
Device Compatibility
Mobile
4-6GB RAM
Laptop
16GB RAM
Server
GPU
Minimum Recommended
30GB+ RAM
Code Examples
txt
<think>
Okay, so I need to figure out what 1 plus 1 is. Hmm, where do I even start? I remember from school that adding numbers is pretty basic, but I want to make sure I understand it properly.
Let me think, 1 plus 1. So, I have one item and I add another one. Maybe like a apple plus another apple. If I have one apple and someone gives me another, I now have two apples. So, 1 plus 1 should be 2. That makes sense.
Wait, but sometimes math can be tricky. Could it be something else? Like, in a different number system maybe? But I think the question is straightforward, using regular numbers, not like binary or hexadecimal or anything.
I also recall that in arithmetic, addition is combining quantities. So, if you have two quantities of 1, combining them gives you a total of 2. Yeah, that seems right.
Is there a scenario where 1 plus 1 wouldn't be 2? I can't think of any...txt
<think>
Okay, so I need to figure out what 1 plus 1 is. Hmm, where do I even start? I remember from school that adding numbers is pretty basic, but I want to make sure I understand it properly.
Let me think, 1 plus 1. So, I have one item and I add another one. Maybe like a apple plus another apple. If I have one apple and someone gives me another, I now have two apples. So, 1 plus 1 should be 2. That makes sense.
Wait, but sometimes math can be tricky. Could it be something else? Like, in a different number system maybe? But I think the question is straightforward, using regular numbers, not like binary or hexadecimal or anything.
I also recall that in arithmetic, addition is combining quantities. So, if you have two quantities of 1, combining them gives you a total of 2. Yeah, that seems right.
Is there a scenario where 1 plus 1 wouldn't be 2? I can't think of any...txt
<think>
Okay, so I need to figure out what 1 plus 1 is. Hmm, where do I even start? I remember from school that adding numbers is pretty basic, but I want to make sure I understand it properly.
Let me think, 1 plus 1. So, I have one item and I add another one. Maybe like a apple plus another apple. If I have one apple and someone gives me another, I now have two apples. So, 1 plus 1 should be 2. That makes sense.
Wait, but sometimes math can be tricky. Could it be something else? Like, in a different number system maybe? But I think the question is straightforward, using regular numbers, not like binary or hexadecimal or anything.
I also recall that in arithmetic, addition is combining quantities. So, if you have two quantities of 1, combining them gives you a total of 2. Yeah, that seems right.
Is there a scenario where 1 plus 1 wouldn't be 2? I can't think of any...txt
<think>
Okay, so I need to figure out what 1 plus 1 is. Hmm, where do I even start? I remember from school that adding numbers is pretty basic, but I want to make sure I understand it properly.
Let me think, 1 plus 1. So, I have one item and I add another one. Maybe like a apple plus another apple. If I have one apple and someone gives me another, I now have two apples. So, 1 plus 1 should be 2. That makes sense.
Wait, but sometimes math can be tricky. Could it be something else? Like, in a different number system maybe? But I think the question is straightforward, using regular numbers, not like binary or hexadecimal or anything.
I also recall that in arithmetic, addition is combining quantities. So, if you have two quantities of 1, combining them gives you a total of 2. Yeah, that seems right.
Is there a scenario where 1 plus 1 wouldn't be 2? I can't think of any...txt
<think>
Okay, so I need to figure out what 1 plus 1 is. Hmm, where do I even start? I remember from school that adding numbers is pretty basic, but I want to make sure I understand it properly.
Let me think, 1 plus 1. So, I have one item and I add another one. Maybe like a apple plus another apple. If I have one apple and someone gives me another, I now have two apples. So, 1 plus 1 should be 2. That makes sense.
Wait, but sometimes math can be tricky. Could it be something else? Like, in a different number system maybe? But I think the question is straightforward, using regular numbers, not like binary or hexadecimal or anything.
I also recall that in arithmetic, addition is combining quantities. So, if you have two quantities of 1, combining them gives you a total of 2. Yeah, that seems right.
Is there a scenario where 1 plus 1 wouldn't be 2? I can't think of any...txt
<think>
Okay, so I need to figure out what 1 plus 1 is. Hmm, where do I even start? I remember from school that adding numbers is pretty basic, but I want to make sure I understand it properly.
Let me think, 1 plus 1. So, I have one item and I add another one. Maybe like a apple plus another apple. If I have one apple and someone gives me another, I now have two apples. So, 1 plus 1 should be 2. That makes sense.
Wait, but sometimes math can be tricky. Could it be something else? Like, in a different number system maybe? But I think the question is straightforward, using regular numbers, not like binary or hexadecimal or anything.
I also recall that in arithmetic, addition is combining quantities. So, if you have two quantities of 1, combining them gives you a total of 2. Yeah, that seems right.
Is there a scenario where 1 plus 1 wouldn't be 2? I can't think of any...Deploy This Model
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