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Wyatt H Knott

@IHasWisdom The problem is typical of metric. Kilos are to big, grams are too small. Meters are too big, millimeters are too small. English units are human scale. They're more usable. And more fun. What's metric got going for it? "oh the math is easier" pffft

8 comments
Ash_Crow

@whknott @IHasWisdom what problem? too small for what? Too large for what?

(Not to mention that you have centimeters and decimeters between meters and millimeters when needed.)

Florens Verschelde

@Ash_Crow @whknott @IHasWisdom For context, in common use people use centimeters (small things), millimeters (tiny things or precision measurements), and meters (big things). Decimeters is almost never used. People's height is often given as "1 meter 78 centimeters" or just "1 meter 78".

Florens Verschelde

@Ash_Crow @whknott @IHasWisdom So in practice it works very much like how Americans use inches (small things), fractions of inches (tiny things and precision measurements), and feet (larger things).

Florens Verschelde

@Ash_Crow @whknott @IHasWisdom Just because a unit of measurement is decimal, doesn't mean people think and talk in scientific numeric prefixes and "ten exponent five" and whatnot. People find a few reliable linguistic landmarks and use that with a shared understanding, in any culture.

Florens Verschelde

@Ash_Crow @whknott @IHasWisdom It just happens that the linguistic landmarks used (mostly cm, m and km) are on a single decimal scale, which you learn in school, unlocking extra power for *some* use cases.

Ash_Crow

@fvsch @whknott @IHasWisdom yup, in practice I've only seen/heard decimeter used to give the size of rulers (double or triple decimeter : 20 or 30 cm ruler)

Florens Verschelde

@Ash_Crow @whknott @IHasWisdom I also suspect that units like "centimeter" and "kilometer" are less palatable in English because they have 4 syllables, vs 3 in French. And I always suspected that three syllables is a bit of a hard limit for linguistic popularity (but I haven't checked that at all).

ThePiper

@Ash_Crow @whknott @IHasWisdom I grew up with the imperial system (inches, foot/pounds and pounds) and had to change to the metric system. I still know that the palm of my hand is 4 inches (10cm), my hand outspread is 8 inches (20 cm) and my thumb is an inch.
But lets face it, 3 mm is far easier to visualise than 1/8 inch
It's merely a matter of utility. Whatever suits the requirement is the measure to be used and the result can be converted either way if necessary

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