▲ | BoxOfRain 7 months ago | ||||||||||||||||
Also the British, we're metric on paper for most things but in practice we use both systems interchangeably for a lot of things. In a few cases like the roads and draught beer imperial units are mandated. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | thechao 7 months ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Since this comes as a surprise to many of my first-time British colleagues: US customary and Imperial use the same names, but are different units. The US customary volume units (cups, gallons, etc.) are on two scales: the "tablespoon scale" which is all powers-of-two, and the "teaspoon scale" which is a third of some nearby tablespoon scale. I used to have a handy chart of the mapping of "prefix" to power-of-two, for 2^-7 to 2^7. Also, the US foot was supposed to be exactly 30cm, but the French couldn't get their shit together, in time. | |||||||||||||||||
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