• hOrni@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    How to explain to Americans: If You remove 3 bullets out of an Gen 4 Glock 26 9mm 12-Round magazine, that’s 1/4. If you remove 4 bullets, that’s 1/3. The police can shoot one more unarmed black man with 1/3 of the magazine than 1/4.

      • Comment105
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        3 months ago

        No, the poor Americans will be confused by the inversion.

        First removing 1/3 (4 rounds) from a 12 round magazine leaving 2/3 (8 rounds) left … then switching to talking about how a 1/3 full magazine with its 4 rounds has more rounds left than the 1/4 mag with 3 rounds.

        They won’t be able to catch on, and are likely to respond with something along the lines of “But the one you took 1/3 out of has just 8 rounds left, and the 1/4 one has 9 rounds left, which is more. The 1/4 one is more.”

          • Etterra@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            Isn’t that what they speak in the Netherlands? Dutchland? Everybody online who’s from Europe says it doesn’t exist, and nobody lies on the internet. That’s how the Europeans can be sure that we’re telling the truth when we tell them that Ohio doesn’t exist.

          • Comment105
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            3 months ago

            Don’t read it, it will give you a headache and make you crave stroopwafel met hagelslag en kokospasta.

            It’s a craving you will never be able to satisfy in a civilized country, meaning you’ll either have to wait it out (takes days, sometimes weeks) or 🤢🤮 travel to the land of the d*tch 🤮😫

  • Asafum@feddit.nl
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    3 months ago

    The American education system (for my old millennial ass)

    “Memorize this. No I will not explain how it works or why. Memorize it take the test and leave me alone.”

    Me who is physically incapable of memorizing seemingly arbitrary stuff and needs to understand for it to stick: I guess fuck me then huh? 1/4 pounder it is!

    • The_Decryptor@aussie.zone
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      3 months ago

      Sounds a hell of a lot like my Australian school experience.

      My high school was great, if you were doing poorly in a class then next year they’d put you in an easier class to bring up your average grade (And if that didn’t work, then they’d just ignore you).

      • Asafum@feddit.nl
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        3 months ago

        Yeah I definitely was. Our regular class of 30 kids in one classroom, one graduation class of 900… The goddamn school was a city of 2,000 kids… Of all those kids, and therefore all those parents paying taxes, we somehow couldn’t afford paper one year. Of my class of 900, 400 graduated. That should tell you something about the shithole I come from lol

  • VinnyDaCat@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    “Somehow it’s ok for people to chuckle about not being good at math. Yet if I said, ‘I never learned to read,’ they’d say I was an illiterate dolt.” - Neil deGrasse Tyson

    It’s been this way for a long time now unfortunately.

    • Got_Bent@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Chuckle? Hell I know full grown adults in their fifties who wear their mathematical ignorance as a badge of pride!

      It’s like they’re clinging to their youth so desperately, that they continue on with the high school trope that only nerds who are undeserving of social interaction know math.

      Meanwhile, they also tend to continuously moan online how broke they are - inevitably from decades of poor financial decisions that landed them under a mountain of usurious debt with double digit compounding interest.

      They also like to get grammatically pedantic on the regular to show off their superior language skills - usually when they’ve got nothing of value to contribute to the conversation or they know they’ve been bested, so better point out those autocorrect errors.

    • LANIK2000@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      In my eyes, if you don’t understand 1/3 > 1/4, then ya might as well be an illiterate dolt. It’s one of the first things you learn in school along with reading. Might as well consider your self a primary school dropout.

  • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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    3 months ago

    I once had a mortgage advisor point at a more than sign and go “is that more or less? I never can remember”

    Like, why did you get into this job? I ended up not taking his advice.

    • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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      3 months ago

      I know there is a syntactically correct way that everyone knows and accepts, but it does depend on what the expression is.

      Do you write it 5 > 3 or 3 < 5?

        • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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          3 months ago

          When I was in elementary school I knew how to use the signs but not how to read them. So I’d always read it as greater than and flip it. So 3 < 5 I would read out loud as “5 is greater than 3”. My teacher quickly corrected me though. So it was only for like a week or so.

        • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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          3 months ago

          Exactly, both of those statements convey the same information but are encoded in different ways.

          To a foreigner, seeing the > < brackets may be more contextual than it is symbolic.

          • Dasus@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            “To a foreigner”?

            You know “<” and “>” aren’t English expressions, right…?

            • Faresh@lemmy.ml
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              3 months ago

              Yes, but if you have 5 > 3, you can read the “>” in two different ways:

              1. 5 is greater than 3 (reading left to right)
              2. 3 is less than 5 (reading right to left)

              So which one is the correct way to spell out “>”? I also was confused about that for some time, since I was taught that the pointy end always points to the smaller number which is intuitive and can very easily be remembered, but I still had to memorize which symbol is pronounced as “less than” and which is pronounced as “greater than” until I realized that at least in every language I speak it’s always read from left to right.

              It still takes a bit of a second for me once in a while these days to remember the correct name for the signs when I see them.

              • GaMEChld@lemmy.world
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                3 months ago

                The way my mind works is I find it faster to reconstruct the meaning every time rather than attempt to memorize which one is said which way.

                Example: 3<5

                My mind:

                1. 3 is the small number / 5 is the large number.

                2. How do I say that in a sentence?

                3. Three is less than five.

                I do the math, not remember the definition.

                • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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                  3 months ago

                  If english is your first and main language, then there is no confusion mapping “less than” → <, and “greater than” → >.

                  If english is not your first and main language, then you might hesitate or ask for clarification on the symbols, or guess from the context.

              • Antium@lemmy.world
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                3 months ago

                We were always told < is less than. The symbol looks like an L for Less. If the L is facing the wrong way > it’s greater than.

            • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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              3 months ago

              no, those use the same operator. My example uses two different operators for the same result

  • seathru@lemmy.sdf.org
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    3 months ago

    Except it’s not true. That was just the excuse A&W made when going bankrupt. No one else had problems selling 1/3lb burgers in the US.

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        Yeah, I would think so. No other restaurant had problems selling 1/3lb burgers. Braums and Carls Jr sling them by the truckload. Almost all the small family restaurants here sell their burgers by 1/3lb 2/3lb sizes. And I don’t exactly live in an area known for it’s high intelligence. So I’m calling shenanigans.

        • Comment105
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          3 months ago

          By now it’s already been a meme for a while. That’s how these people learned that the ⅓ was bigger than the ¼.

          • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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            3 months ago

            Nah, if you look in any American kitchen, you’ll find 1/3 cup and 1/4 cup measuring cups. They may not use them, but everyone has them, and it’s painfully obvious that the 1/4 nests inside the 1/3, therefore the 1/3 is bigger. If you want to make mac 'n cheese, you use the 1/4 for the milk, which means you’ll take it out of the 1/3 cup.

            • Comment105
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              3 months ago

              Americans are so bad at measurements that graduation marks don’t work for them.

              They need an individual container for each common measurement.

              It’s absurd.

              • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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                3 months ago

                Lol.

                But yes, we do have graduation marks like this one, which would also clearly label the 1/4 cup and 1/3 cup parts. Whichever one you have, it’s pretty intuitive that 1/3 > 1/4. I prefer the separate ones since they take up less space so they can go in a drawer instead of the cupboard (and I have 2-3 of each size), but to each their own.

  • CluckN@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Try to compete with McDonald’s marketing on their brand new 1/4 pounder

    Get absolutely destroyed when piggy-backing their marketing strategy fails

    Blame the customer for not understanding fractions

      • taiyang@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Wait no, they should do that. The eighth burger would be a success (although to be fair the 1/3 Burger was decades ago so maybe times have changed)

  • thisbenzingring@lemmy.sdf.org
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    The way he lays out his math had me a little confused at first but I blame it on my lack of coffee

    When I was in grade school I remember a teacher told me that if you think about the greater and less than signs as alligators eating the bigger numbers… To this day, it’s still what I see

    • Faresh@lemmy.ml
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      3 months ago

      My teacher put a kid with dwarfism and tall kid side by side in front of the black board and drew a line between the tops of their heads, and then another still downwards but in the opposite horizontal direction. Thus the pointy end always faces the smaller thing, while the open end always faces the larger thing. Doesn’t work so well in english, though since it kind of implies people with dwarfism are “less than” people without the condition. In the language it was taught the verbs used for < and > are also used when comparing heights.

      • thetreesaysbark@sh.itjust.works
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        3 months ago

        Huh… I was taught they are 2 lines. There’s a bigger gap on the side which is bigger, and a smaller gap on the side that’s smaller (so small they touch)

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    3 months ago

    I used to work on a deli. Someone ordered an eighth pound of meat (which is like nothing and nobody ever did this). My coworker asked me if that meant .8 on the scale.

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        3 months ago

        That was another point of frustration. People would think if they asked for a half pound and the scale reads .6 they get a deal, but in reality it’s just printing a label that says my pounds and they gotta pay accordingly. Some customers would accuse you of ripping them off if they asked for a specific amount and got that amount exactly.

        • Zozano@lemy.lol
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          This is hilarious, I never considered people would actually think like that.

          Why would they think you’re weighing it? To see if your judgement of the weight is accurate?

          • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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            3 months ago

            Beats me. It’s not like we were taking money at the deli counter either. Also the labels say how much weight there is, price per pound, and the total price. Just like meat from the meat department would. But I guess because they’re asking for it in person they think it works differently.

    • psud@aussie.zone
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      That’s ~50g. I wouldn’t think of ordering less than 100g of anything at a deli

      (At least people in metric countries hardly need fractions)

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    3 months ago

    Well, the 1/3 also had to compete with the double-quarter (aka, half pound, but two patties), which is bigger and feels significantly more substantial as well.

    It doesn’t help that any place I saw selling them (let’s be real here, this is about McD’s) was offering an expensive and fancy 1/3rd burger (deluxe bacon, southwest ranch style, Asian sensation with real gold flake, etc) against the old reliable (cheap) quarter-pounder. Perceived value is everything.

    Also, we’re bad at math, lol

    • cowfodder@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      A&W had a 1/3lb burger that was cheaper than McDonald’s quarter pounder. Nothing fancy about it, just people are bad at math.

        • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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          I keep seeing people talking as if they didn’t exist anymore but they still have about 600 restaurants in the US and 400 elsewhere (not counting the Canadian version which is independent and doing very well as far as I know and actually has more locations than the US chain)

          • Mongostein@lemmy.ca
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            3 months ago

            Canadian here.

            Canadian A&W is super good and iirc (which I probably don’t) they never had anything to do with the American chain

            • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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              3 months ago

              They were split in 72 but A&W is over 100 years old so they were under the same umbrella for most of their history.

              • ji17br@lemmy.ml
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                3 months ago

                Things get crazy when you realize how long ago 1972 was.

                First restaurant founded in 1923. 1972-1923 = 49 years. 2024-1972 = 52 years.

                Sources say they were not, in fact, under the same umbrella for most of their history.

          • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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            3 months ago

            There’s one like a mile from me, but I never go because they suck. Oh, and KFC sucks as well, yet they decided to co-brand with them.

            I liked it as a kid, but I tried them a few years ago and they are awful. I much prefer Carl’s Jr and even Wendy’s.

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            3 months ago

            There used to be one near me and there isn’t anymore. I really miss the root beer that was on tap there, something they did to it at the restaurant made it special (possibly a different syrup or the way they mixed it).

          • thisbenzingring@lemmy.sdf.org
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            3 months ago

            I only see them as partnerships with other places like KFC. In my childhood there was a bunch of them. I liked them best.

  • dQw4w9WgXcQ
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    3 months ago

    It doesn’t take a ton of mental capacity, but even though I have a good education in math, I still find myself doing the heuristics of assuming that larger digits means larger number. Using fractions for comparing sizes can flip these heuristics. And I think a lot of people are like me, and also that they won’t spend a lot of time reading each item on the menu.

    Where I’m from, burger sizes are just given in amount of grams, which makes it a lot easier to compare.

    • StThicket@reddthat.com
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      Even though fractions makes sense for accuracy in a mathematical point of view, I see no benefit in a practical application.

      • 31337@sh.itjust.works
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        Fractions are easier to do calculations in your head or on paper than trying to do the same stuff in decimals. E.g. half of 1/2 is 1/4, half of 1/4 is 1/8, half of 1/8 is 1/16, half of 1/16 is 1/32 etc. In decimals this would be 0.5 -> 0.25 -> 0.125 -> 0.0625 -> 0.03125. When building stuff, I find it useful to be able to do that kind of stuff in my head easily.

        • dQw4w9WgXcQ
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          3 months ago

          The problem occurs when you have a 1/4 pound burger for $1 and a 1/3 pound burger for $1.25. Is it worth it?

          If only using fractions in powers of 2 1/2, I understand that it’s simpler. A carpenter is happy to meassure 3/16s of an inch, since the tools have notches or marks for that. But when you include other fractions, it becomes messy.

          How much more is 1/3 than 1/4? Instead of handling digits, you have to find the lowest common denominator to perform the subtraction. I.e. 1/3 - 1/4 = 4/12 - 3/12 = 1/12.

          And at this point, I believe the relationship to the units are lost. Do you have any direct sense to what 1/12 of a pound is?

          The 1/3 pound burger is (1/3)/(1/4) times the size of the 1/4 pound burger. So the burger is worth it if $1*(1/3)/(1/4) is greater than $1.25. We arrive at $4/3 which we want to compare to $1.25. Now, since we are relating units which use fractions to units where fractions are unusual, we have another problem. (Yes, we can easily see tha 4/3 = 1.333…, but we wanted to use fractions, right?). So to compare the numbers, we can see that 1.25 = 125/100, which we can simplify to 5/4. So in the end we are left with the simple problem of finding which is bigger between 4/3 or 5/4.

          To summarize, I agree that fractions are nice when you have them in a vacuum and don’t have to relate them to numbers of other units.

        • hswolf@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          why use decimals when you can use the… you know, actual weight of the thing?

            • hswolf@lemmy.world
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              3 months ago

              I get what you mean, but its adding a useless complexity layer.

              If the thing always is smaller than, for example, a kilogram, just use the next measurement unit, a gram. 100g, 200g, 500g, etc.

              It’s true the other way around, if the thing is always bigger than, for example, a kilogram, use it as is. 1kg, 1.5kg, 4kg, 6.2kg.

              For ease of comparison, always use the most significant unit.

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      Interesting.

      But we use fractions a ton here in the US. For example, you can buy milk in a half gallon or a gallon. When you measure, you use 1/4 cup or 1/2 cup. In metric, you rarely use fractions and instead just change the unit (e.g. 250ml or 1L).

      Since it’s so common here, it’s honestly nuts to me that anyone here would be confused at whether 1/4 lb or 1/3 lb is bigger, because we use fractions so often here. If you’ve ever cooked anything in your life (incl. macaroni and cheese from a box), you’ve dealt with fractions in real life. I probably do more fraction math than decimal math, especially since I buy everything with my credit card, so when I see a decimal, I round it to the nearest convenient fraction (e.g. I bought 4.5lbs of meat recently for a dinner party, and I communicated that as 4 1/2 lbs). If you ask me how many ounces are in a 1/4 cup, I’d have to stop and think. But if you ask me how many 1/4 cups are in a cup, I’d have the answer for you on the spot.

      So I could see this happening in areas where fractions aren’t common, but in the US, it’s something everyone deals with, pretty much daily. Oh, btw, we have one of these at my local dump:

      )

    • meliante@lemmy.world
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      heuristics of assuming that larger digits means larger number

      That’s not heuristics, it’s mental laziness or smoothbrain. You shouldn’t say you have a good education in math and then say that…

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        It’s indeed a form of mental laziness because the mind is designed to approach some concepts with a non-perfect optimization. That’s heuristics. Yes, I can very easily see which number is the largest if I put my mind at it. But scanning over a fast food chain-sized menu, seeing numbers for 2, 4, 8, 12 piece nuggets, prices on different items and a 1/3 pound burger next to a 1/4 pound burger, I could easily see my mind skip the math and mess up the size comparrison.

          • dQw4w9WgXcQ
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            I’m all up for being corrected if I’m wrong in my laguage somehow, but that article seems to be 100% in line with my understanding. What do you find to be wrong?

            • meliante@lemmy.world
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              Like the article says in the first sentence, heuristics “is any approach to problem solving that employs a pragmatic method”. Looking at fractions and assuming that the big number is larger is not a pragmatic method, it’s a completely smoothbrain approach. I can’t even comprehend how you think that’s a good approach to fractions. It’s just flummoxing.

              • dQw4w9WgXcQ
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                I think we just disagree on the level something has to be to be considered “pragmatic”. Almost all numbers we deal with in a daily basis are not fractions, so it’s very natural to develop a shortcut to quickly look at digits to compare numbers. That is a practical approach.

                Now, if you don’t get too stuck on the word “pragmatic” but actually finish the sentence, you might find it to be more applicable.

                Or maybe even look at the wikipedia page for heuristics from a psychological perspective:

                https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heuristic_(psychology)

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                  3 months ago

                  Yes, I disagree that looking at a fraction and thinking “bigger number = larger number” is heuristic. It’s just really extremely dumb and I can’t even.

                  That’s it. There’s no argument, although you seem to think there is.

                • meliante@lemmy.world
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                  3 months ago

                  I believe that’s the jist of it. Heuristic is a way to get a roughly correct answer to a specific problem. If it doesn’t provide a response that stays in the same ballpark of the real solution to the problem it’s not heuristic, it’s just a wrong train of thought.

  • Madison420@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    The third burger failed because it was a stupid amount when it came out, iirc it was more expensive than the quarter lber and like a dollar less than a double quarter lber.

    • Comment105
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      Why the fuck would you bring ounces into it? We were having a perfectly fine conversation here and now you’ve brought imperial unit conversion into the mix.

      What’s the ounce to pound thing again? 12? 16? 20, or 32 or something? Who am I kidding? I don’t give a shit.

      If you’re not using metric at least have the decency to stick to pounds, kilopounds, millipounds, micropounds, or whatever the fuck you want to name your orders of 1,000. Just don’t ever come here fucking about with short tons and long tons or I’ll strap you to a board, drop you in a tub, and drown you in a metric ton of sewage.

        • mckean@programming.dev
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          It’s probably just a british person complaining about units as they can’t make up their mind what to use. Ounces is perfectly valid in the context of pounds…

          • Don_alForno@feddit.org
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            3 months ago

            A pound is roughly half a kg, we can work with that. But nobody outside the imperial using countries knows what an ounce is, and we don’t regularly use any unit close to it.

              • Don_alForno@feddit.org
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                3 months ago

                Ok. Canada finished converting in 1985, there’s bound to still be a lot of people who grew up with imperial. “Current or former imperial using countries” then.

                • ji17br@lemmy.ml
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                  3 months ago

                  You clearly don’t live in Canada. Imperial units are very common for measurements. You ask nearly anyone, old or young, their height or weight, you’re getting an answer in feet/inches or pounds respectively.

                  Tons of baking is done using cups, tsp, tbsp etc.

                  Golfers use yards.

                  I’m sure there are more examples I am forgetting, but you get the idea. It’s not just people who grew up before 1985. It’s everyone.

            • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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              3 months ago

              Pretty much everyone uses troy ounces for things like gold.

              But if you’re in the US, you also need to be more specific, since we also have fluid ounces.