If for example the number one-thousand needs to be written, they'd write 1.000 instead of 1,000. I'm asking because I've seen so many people on here write their numbers like that and I assume it's a country-specific thing. Question, how do you distinguish a number like 10,520.341 when your number would look like 10.520.341 if you use decimals instead of commas. I'm probably missing something, pls tell me if you know.
The Fahrenheit system is better than the Celsius system because it's focused around temperature for humans instead of water. The American date system is better because in everyday conversations you always say the month before the day.
The Fahrenheit system is better than the Celsius system because it's focused around temperature for humans instead of water. The American date system is better because in everyday conversations you always say the month before the day.
1. No, they're both dumb
2. Don't digress, the thread is about symbols
Most of the world uses metric, but english speaking countries like Australia and New Zealand are using metric and also use 1,000 = 1k while most (all?) of continental europe use 1.000 = 1k.
The Fahrenheit system is better than the Celsius system because it's focused around temperature for humans instead of water. The American date system is better because in everyday conversations you always say the month before the day.
That must be just American too, or at least not a thing where I live. I've never heard anyone say, for example it's October 7th always it's the 7th of October.
That must be just American too, or at least not a thing where I live. I've never heard anyone say, for example it's October 7th always it's the 7th of October.
Yeah, agreed, at school they teach us British English and they make us say it's the 7th of October even though the American way is accepted too.