The 32F is a constant that must be accounted for in any such conversion. The
point is that each 1C degree above or below the freezing point is equal to 1.8F
degrees above or below the freezing point the the relevant scale. That 32F
degrees has nothing to do with the unit equivalence. It is
and you get -18 so half of that gives you -9 which is close
enough to the accurate result of -9.4.
Original Message-
From: viphone@googlegroups.com On Behalf Of Bill
Gallik
Sent: January 6, 2022 8:19 PM
To: viPhone
Subject: Re: Temperature Mispronunciation
Oh boy, I could write
I switch between C and F regularly, I suspect my prior message will shed quite
a bit of light on my fettish for this topic.
The problem I exposed only occurs at 1F or -1F and then only with select
voices. This bug does not manifest with the Alex voice.
I have verified if this bug shows up
Oh boy, I could write a dissertation on this subject; but never fear I will
restrain myself.
First, I think it’s worth noting that 5 Centigrade degrees is equivalent to 9
Fahrenheit degrees. 1 degree Centigrade is the same as 1.8 Fahrenheit degrees
- let’s say 2F degrees for simplicity’s
@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: Temperature Mispronunciation
Are you using metric or imperial measurements?
I use a different weather app here in British Columbia, Canada, but I just
opened the stock Weather app and temperatures are being read correctly, I use
the SIRI Voice 4 United States.
I sure hope you do
: January 6, 2022 11:10 AM
To: viPhone
Subject: Temperature Mispronunciation
Considering where I live in the extremely cold temperatures that we get here,
most of you would never experience this bug.
However, when I open the weather app on my iPhone 8 and the temperature is at
1° it is red as &q
Considering where I live in the extremely cold temperatures that we get here,
most of you would never experience this bug.
However, when I open the weather app on my iPhone 8 and the temperature is at
1° it is red as "X 31°."
To complicate matters further, this does not happen with the Alex