Not to mention the unbelievably annoying use of the symbol in sentences like
this:  "We will meet for dinner @ 7:00 pm" - which doesn't even save a
keystroke (shift-2 vs. a t).

 

Carleton

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Bill Hooper
Sent: Tuesday, April 07, 2009 14:52
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:44461] Re: FPLA 2010

 

 

On  Apr 5 , at 5:47 PM, <[email protected]> <[email protected]> wrote:





(A) (i) if on a package, labeled in terms of mass, shall be expressed in g
or its multiples; 

 (ii) if on a package labeled in terms of linear measure, shall be expressed
in  m or its 

multiples; 

(iii) if on a package labeled in terms of area, shall be expressed in  m2
or its multiples;        

(iv) if on a container labeled in terms of volume or fluid measure shall be
expressed in m3 or 

its multiples, or ml, mL, or L.  

 

 

Sorry, but I can't agree that units symbols should be used in place of unit
names (written out) in text material. Unit symbols are "symbols" and should
be used with symbols, like "25". All numerically written numbers are
symbols. "25" is a symbol, "twenty-five" is a word. Thus write "twenty-five
metres" or write "25 m" but generally avoid writing "twenty-five m" and "25
metres". (I admit that the latter is commonly accepted.)

 

The normal extension of that, from the SI point of view, is that unit
symbols are not intended to be used with words in ANY situation, such as the
above quoted material from Gene Mechtly.  It should say "... expressed in
grams ...", definitely not "... expressed in g ...", and likewise in all the
other examples in his text.

 

This has to do as much with good writing style as it does with SI. I may
have to interpret the intent of the SI rules to make my case, but the
writing style rules are clear. Good writing does not allow words to be
supplanted by symbols except where the symbol is part of an expression that
is normally written that way.

 

One does not report a medical check-up by writing "I saw the Dr. today" nor
"It only cost a $ to buy the magazine". We write "I saw the doctor today"
and "It only cost a dollar to buy the book".

 

However, since "Dr." is traditionally used as part of a title, it is proper
to write "I saw Dr. Smith today". Also, since "$" is typically used to
express amount of money in dollars, it is proper to write "It only cost $1
to buy the magazine." 

 

The rule for most of the above could read:

   "Use words with word and symbols with symbols, no mixtures."

That would cover the above situations and also some other annoying uses like
the following.

 

Bad and common:

   kilometres/hour 

(which is in the form of word-symbol-word)

 

Less common but equally bad:

   km per hr 

(symbol-word-wrong symbol), 

 

and worse yet but unfortunately quite common:

   kph 

(wrong symbol-abbreviation-symbol)

 

The only acceptable forms are:

all in symbols,

   km/h (as in "The car went 85 km/h down the road.")

and

all in words,

   kilometres per hour (as in "The speed limits are posted in kilometres per
hour.")

 

Bill Hooper

body mass*

  73 kg

    seventy-three kilograms

Fernandina Beach, Florida, USA

 

* plus or minus a kilogram or so.

   (NOT plus or minus a kg or 2 !)

 

 

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