What is credit for you

Credit, in general terms, refers to the ability to borrow money or access goods/services with the promise to pay later. It's essentially trust extended by a lender to a borrower.
Here are the main ways "credit" is understood:
In Finance & Banking
  • A credit is an entry that increases a liability or revenue account (opposite of a debit) - this is the accounting definition.
  • It also refers to a loan or borrowing facility - e.g., a line of credit, credit card, or mortgage.
  • Your credit score measures your creditworthiness - how reliably you repay debts.
In Everyday Language
  • "Give credit" = acknowledge someone's contribution or merit.
  • "On credit" = buying something now, paying later.
In Education
  • A credit is a unit measuring course completion (e.g., 3 credit hours).
In Business
  • A credit note is a document reducing the amount a customer owes.
  • Trade credit is when suppliers let businesses pay after receiving goods.
Core Idea Across All Uses: Credit always involves trust + future obligation - whether it's money owed, recognition due, or coursework completed.

Could you give me a bit more context about what you're looking for? For example:
  • Are you asking about financial credit (loans, credit scores)?
  • Accounting credit (debits and credits)?
  • Something else entirely?
That way I can give you a much more targeted and useful answer!

Nope i say you habe cradits limit which for credit

Ah, you're asking about my credit/budget limits shown in the system! Great question.
At the top of each conversation, I have a budget that tracks how many times I can use certain tools. Here's what those limits mean for me:

My Tool Credit Limits (Current Session)

ToolLimitPurpose
web_search5Search the internet
query_library_db10Search medical textbooks
pubmed_search10Search medical research papers
fetch_image10View/load images
analyse_media5Analyze photos/videos
web_extract3Read full web pages
task2Launch sub-agents
Model calls19Total think+act cycles

Why Do I Have Limits?

  • Each tool call uses computing resources and costs money
  • The limits prevent me from going overboard on a single question
  • They push me to be efficient - make parallel calls, not wasteful ones
  • Once a limit hits 0, I can no longer use that tool in this session

In Simple Terms

Think of it like a prepaid phone plan - I get a fixed number of "minutes" (tool calls) per conversation. I try to spend them wisely to give you the best answer possible!
Is there anything else you'd like to know?
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