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Apr 28, 2017 at 11:43 comment added daiscog @3-14159265358979323846264 I actually thought your use of "mflop" was deliberate and sarcastic, and so I found it rather amusing.
Apr 28, 2017 at 9:54 comment added 3-14159265358979323846264 @Philipp :-D excellent skills. My apologies Mflop.
Apr 27, 2017 at 8:34 comment added Philipp @3-14159265358979323846264 who is meterflop?
Jan 12, 2017 at 16:26 comment added 3-14159265358979323846264 @megaflop Good point mflop
Jun 5, 2015 at 16:09 comment added daiscog But, unlike an engineering paper, StackExchange isn't necessarily for the scientific community. There are myriad forums in the SE family which are not of a scientific nature. For me, the reason for using "m" is simple: it is a grammatically correct abbreviation for "million", whereas "M" is not.
Jun 5, 2015 at 15:50 comment added Paul H Right, that's fine. It's just not a compelling reason to conflate the universal symbol for meter with a language-specific abbreviation for million. Yeah "M" means "mega", but mega equally means 10^6. So to me, "$10M" reads "10 million dollars", just like "$10k" is 10 "thousand" dollars. Lots of international visitors to the site. If I wrote an engineering report using "m" to mean million, it would be changed immediately by the first person who reviewed it.
Jun 5, 2015 at 15:15 comment added daiscog This is a linguistics issue. Language isn't defined from the top down, but by common usage. The majority of the English-speaking population don't actually care about SI units or their prefixes, so to write "4,4 megapeople" would be meaningless and confusing to them. They wouldn't know what a megaperson is. However, to write "4.4 million people" is explicit, and in the English language people use "m" as an abbreviation for "million".
Jun 5, 2015 at 15:09 comment added daiscog You've clearly missed my point then: The "m" isn't being used as a unit prefix; it is being used to abbreviate the word "million".
Jun 5, 2015 at 14:06 comment added Paul H I could write "Austin, Tex" on a letter, and the U.S. Postal service would know I meant "Austin, TX", but that doesn't change the fact that "TX" is the official abbreviation for Texas w/i the postal system.
Jun 5, 2015 at 14:05 comment added Paul H Of course context is important. I'd figure it out, but it also makes me think that the telegraph is pretty sloppy with prefixes (but so is the UK's adoption of SI). There are plenty of reasons "m" is good enough, but none are very compelling and none outweigh, in my mind, the fact the "M" would be better.
Jun 5, 2015 at 10:40 comment added daiscog @PaulH So how would you read this headline: England to be 1m homes short of housing its people by 2025? As a civil engineer, would you think it means England will be short of 1 metre high houses? As with a lot of things in natural language, context is highly relevant and meaning is deduced as much from the surrounding words as the words themselves.
Jun 4, 2015 at 19:56 comment added Paul H As civil engineer first and programmer second, "4m points" actually just looks like nonsense to me. My first thought would be either 1) locations spaced 4 m apart or 2) points with zones of influence 4 m in diameter.
Jun 4, 2015 at 19:52 comment added The Guy with The Hat @PaulH Would you really? If I said "I have 4m points on Stack Overflow," it would take somebody dumber than you to think I meant "4 meters points" (which is both factually and grammatically incorrect) rather than "4 million points."
Jun 4, 2015 at 15:53 comment added Paul H I would read that a "4 meters points" and wonder why there's no space between the "4" and the "m"
Jun 4, 2015 at 9:10 history answered daiscog CC BY-SA 3.0