I think John really meant "a metric foot" of snow had fallen. See "metric foot" on Wikipedia for more details. Bill Fairchild
----- Original Message ----- From: "Tom Marchant" <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Sent: Friday, January 3, 2014 10:18:37 AM Subject: Re: Carmine Cannatello's book On Thu, 2 Jan 2014 14:57:13 -0700, Paul Gilmartin wrote: >You have: 1 ft >You want: cm > * 30.48 > / 0.032808399 That's how the conversion is done. I think that Ray's point was that we don't know the precision of "a foot of snow" in this case. If it was given as 12 inches, it might mean anything from 11.5 inches to just under 12.5 inches. "A foot" could easily be the description if there was somewhat less precision than that. My guess is that John used the precise conversion lest he confuse someone if, for example, he had written 30 cm. Or perhaps even confuse someone even more by checking again and finding that official metric reading was e.g. 32.4 cm. -- Tom Marchant
