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The phrase "a tiny error in the" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a small mistake or oversight in a specific context, such as a document, code, or any other work.
Example: "After reviewing the report, I noticed a tiny error in the calculations that needs to be corrected."
Alternatives: "a minor mistake in the" or "a small flaw in the".
Exact(5)
("I wrote before I Googled," he said of a tiny error in the program).
Even a tiny error in the representation of a virtual character can cause viewers to sense that they are looking at a contrived figure.
In 1994, the giant chip maker was humbled by a tiny error in the floating point calculation unit of its Pentium chips.
But after examining blood samples from five families in the United States, Britain, South Korea and Brazil, Dr. Kaplan and Eileen Shore, a colleague, found that the rampant bone growth begins with a tiny error in the nucleotide sequence of a gene that serves as a blueprint for a protein called ACVR1.
Employees at the Asan factory, where the Sonata is built, worked feverishly to fix such things as a tiny error in the size of the gap between two pieces of sheet metal near the headlight, even though it wasn't obvious to the naked eye and didn't affect the car's operation.
Similar(55)
First of all by working in small scale, any slight error would be magnified – a tiny error in a 30cm long model of Diplodocus representing an animal that may have been more than 25m could easily result in a huge error when scaled up the necessary 90 or so times.
When Barbara, who is attractive, blond and self-possessed, points out some tiny errors in the score, he is impressed and takes an immediate, proprietary interest in her.
It's even easier to pick out the tiny errors in the film's fluid cinematography, from the impossible rooms to the button on Riggan's shirt, he adds. .
Not only that, but even a tiny error, a highly specific combination of minor flaws in the code, will affect astronomical numbers of people.
But according to the Hungarian writer and International Master Tibor Karolyi, Anatoly Karpov came close to playing a mistake-free game at the 1974 chess olympiad in Nice, France, and only a tiny error deprived him of creating a perfect game.
That is smaller than a tiny statistical error in the Chinese Census.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com