As far as I know, the usual unit prefix for millions is mega, written as M. I think it should apply to unit-less numbers as well.
Thus, I suggest that
~4.4m
is changed to
~4.4M
It's arguably much cooler to see a bigger M anyway.
This is pretty much the most valid comment:
Meta makes a good point: these aren't SI units, it's EN-US slang (more or less). For most people in EN-* locales, the UX is better than SI units would be, with no loss of accuracy or real problems.
We're not speaking of internationalized units here.
As far as I know, the usual unit prefix for millions is mega, written as M.
The usual prefix for mega is M. It just so happens that mega is of the order of magnitude of millions, so a sloppy equivalence (similar to PHP's ==
) makes people think that million actually means mega.
We're not speaking mega-people-reached, or kilo-people-reached here. Those unit signs should apply when referencing standard, internationalized units, not people who may have viewed your activity on Stack Overflow.
We're not speaking mega-people-reached, or kilo-people-reached here.
Then why the k
suffix for thousands? If it's that "EN-US slang" thing you mention, where can I find the specs for it? I am from a part of the world where EN-US slang is not the default locale: the UX argument is hazy at best, while SI units (or spelling out the number) are unambiguous for everyone everywhere. The current solution is a mish mash of confusion.
Commented
Jun 4, 2015 at 3:21
k
for thousand is very common around here, which could be counter-intuitive for a french-speaking place. And as far as I'm concerned, m
for million has been very clear from the first time I've seen it.
Commented
Jun 4, 2015 at 5:17
Sanity check: If the number got into the billions, would you really expect to see "1.5G"?
I know I certainly wouldn't.
How about a compromise:
Use small caps for the M, like this:
TL;DR: This is an abbreviation of the number, not of the unit.
As noted, M
is an SI prefix for mega-, but I think the important point being missed here is that not only does the usage in question not actually mean mega nor is it for an SI unit, but it isn't even a prefix (it's being used as a suffix to the number, not a prefix to the unit; the unit isn't megapeople, it's still people).
It's common in all English-speaking locales (AFAIK) to abbreviate million to m; for example "4m points" is literally read as "four million points", not "four megapoints".
In the SI system, the standard unit for discrete quantities / number of things isn't "1", or "people", it's the mole ;-)
So, you can write in English, in which case "4.4m people" is a cromulent abbreviation of "4.4 million people", and I think more common than 4.4M. Or else you can use SI units, in which case it's 7.3 attomoles of people. I don't think SI is useful for this purpose, even on Chemistry.
In UX you choose between SI and other English-language conventions as suits you. In this case I don't think there's any good case for the SI prefix M over the English abbreviation of "million" m. They are after all SI prefixes, used before an SI unit. They aren't SI suffixes used after a number. And if they were, then "200m" would be ambiguous between "200 metres" and "0.2". There's nothing to stop you using them that way, 4.4M is comprehensible, but it's not the international standard and it is not more noble than using other numeric abbreviations.
If Stack Exchange were localised for India then it might usefully say 44 lakh or 44L (I haven't checked). In simplified Chinese I think it would be 440万 (I don't know any Chinese, but that's what I see for play counts on video sites and suchlike). Leaving aside moles because they're incomprehensible to real people, there is currently no ratified international standard for writing large numbers. Don't treat 4.4M as if it is one.
Abbreviations for million and where they are used seems to not contain a lower-case 'm' . I would normally use the abbreviation 'mil' but it's not on this list either :/
Let's go with 'M' because NASA uses it :D
We don't need no SI units 'round here. The m stands for "million" as in "you're one in a million, baby". And you know that you are - but this is still status-declined.
Note that on some other sites, the suffixes will be different:
...and in some cases, so will the the scale:
m
also stands for meter in SI, mile in British English etc. I'd prefer to comply SI as much as possible to avoid confusion.
mil
stands for a thousandth of an inch. And is commonly used in say printed circuit board design and electronics packaging. So kind of the people that hang around SE too. (And yes I know it's hard to be misunderstood in context.)
Why not MM, like the financial people use? I believe this comes from Roman numeral M meaning thousand, so 4.4 MM is 4.4 thousand thousand or 4.4 million.
How about powers of two?
2^32
Sufficiently geeky for Stack Overflow and no letters to be confused about. Also, it's kind of programming-related!
k
rather thanK
.k
is to be used forkilo
. UppercaseK
means something else on its own (a temperature unit), but it's used inKi
, most notably withKiB
.[status-declined]
duplicate on the Overmeta: Use 'M' for million instead of 'm'.