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The decimal point

Featured Replies

What confuses a lot of people is that certain countries use the comma (,) instead of the full stop (.) as the decimal separator.

 

Throw into the mix the Indian use of Crore and Lakh which are not in multiples of 1000.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_numbering_system

and we have the possibility of contract values being orders of magnitude out.

 

I've actually seen a bid hastily withdrawn when the numbers were two fewer zeros than the other competing bids.

 

 

 

 

"I don't want to know why you can't. I want to know how you can!"

That one was keeping me awake at night ... "when damn it, when"

 

Now I can get a good night's sleep ... oh crapimage.png.e8dd26466eb23f0de77b1dfcc8720d22.png

 

5 hours ago, Crossy said:

What confuses a lot of people is that certain countries use the comma (,) instead of the full stop (.) as the decimal separator.

 

Throw into the mix the Indian use of Crore and Lakh which are not in multiples of 1000.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_numbering_system

and we have the possibility of contract values being orders of magnitude out.

 

I've actually seen a bid hastily withdrawn when the numbers were two fewer zeros than the other competing bids.

 

 

 

 

 

An old school friend of mine (we both grew up in the Scottish Highlands so we were not the most sophisticated of people), upon graduating university in the early 90s got a job in banking in London.

 

He told me that in his first week there he realised that all his colleagues wore shirts with french cuffs so he bought some but then he realised that he didn't have any cufflinks to go with them so he went out to buy those too.

 

He went to a jewelry shop near his office and the assistant showed him a couple of pairs that he liked. The assistant said that the first pair were 'fifteen ninety nine' and the other were 'twenty four ninety nine'.

 

Thinking that he would get two smart pairs of cufflinks for about £41, he happily said that he would take both. 

 

When they gave him a bill for £4098, he quickly realised his error, but he was so mortified that he meekly handed over his credit card and bought both pairs.

 

  • Popular Post
27 minutes ago, RuamRudy said:

When they gave him a bill for £4098, he quickly realised his error, but he was so mortified that he meekly handed over his credit card and bought both pairs.

He could not possibly have been Scottish to fall for that!

Irish, Welsh or any other nationality possibly but not one of us canny Scots!

He wid a Haggled wi the Basa!

 

PS: "He wid a Haggled wi the Basa!" translates as;

 

"The very very sober and upright Scottish gentleman would have politely remonstrated with the said, offspring of an unmarried couple, purveyor of the said expensive items, to negotiate a substantial reduction in the indicative price and tell him where they could be inserted in the most painful way"!

 

PPS;

wid=would

Haggled=shout and called him all the religious Catholic/protestant insults as appropriate that he could think of

wi=with

Basa=B@stard!

 

PPPS;  Translations are copyright of Billy Connolly!

 

  • Author
8 hours ago, OneMoreFarang said:

Gamma, is that you? 

 

Nope. It is not I.

 

I am merely an ardent collector of useless information, currently on a 3-month vacation in Thailand that will end in three weeks.

5 minutes ago, Puccini said:

 

Nope. It is not I.

 

I am merely an ardent collector of useless information, currently on a 3-month vacation in Thailand that will end in three weeks.

 

3 months or 90 days? 😉

  • Author
3 hours ago, scottiejohn said:

...He wid a Haggled wi the Basa!...

 

I love the Scottish jargon; not that I understand much of it.

 

l remember that in the 1980s, I was on an incentive trip to Rhodes with a group of UK pharmacists, among them a Scot with whom I got on rather well. Learnt a few things about scotch that I hadn't known yet at that tender age.

On 2/25/2024 at 11:39 AM, Puccini said:

I was so excited reading this that I immediately added it to my fountain of useless knowledge.

 

I bet your honeymoon was a blast! :tongue:

  • Author
3 hours ago, daveAustin said:

 

I bet your honeymoon was a blast! :tongue:

 

My lips are sealed.

  • Author
18 hours ago, Lemsta69 said:

 

3 months or 90 days? 😉

 

With a non-immigrant visa category O valid for one entry, I made sure to book the flights so as not to exceed 90 days in Thailand based on immigration's method of counting.

18 hours ago, Puccini said:

I love the Scottish jargon; not that I understand much of it.

 

 

Taoism: shit happens

Buddhism: if shit happens, it isn't really shit

Islam: if shit happens, it is the will of Allah

Catholicism: if shit happens, you deserve it

Judaism: why does this shit always happen to us?

Atheism: I don't believe this shit

  • Author
18 hours ago, Lemsta69 said:

 

3 months or 90 days? 😉

 

With a non-immigrant visa category O valid for one entry, I made sure to book the flights so as not to exceed 90 days in Thailand based on immigration's method of counting.

  • Author
On 2/25/2024 at 12:42 PM, Crossy said:

...Throw into the mix the Indian use of Crore and Lakh which are not in multiples of 1000...

 

That reminds me of the time before metrication in the UK and in school, we had to add up long columns of amounts, with the amounts not in one column but in three, headed £, s, d. That was fun.

2 minutes ago, Puccini said:

 

That reminds me of the time before metrication in the UK and in school, we had to add up long columns of amounts, with the amounts not in one column but in three, headed £, s, d. That was fun.

 

I still remember the stupid little ditty that we had to learn when we went decimal!

 

My parents had a shop so all the staff had to train with plastic decimal coinage, oh such fun!

 

"I don't want to know why you can't. I want to know how you can!"

I was actually working in The Royal Bank of Scotland over the longest planned Bank holiday in history at the time of the change over!

Although we had mainframes in the HQ for the big boys the then cash paid wages customers, OAPs etc all had staff facing hand written ledger accounts!

 Banks were closed from 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday 10 February 1971 to 10:00 a.m. on Monday 15 February to enable all outstanding cheques and credits in the clearing system to be processed and customers' account balances to be converted from £sd to decimal.  February had been chosen for Decimal Day because it was the quietest time of the year for the banks, shops and transport organisations.

10AM Monday was chaotic especially for the OAPs.

I will leave you to imagine the scenes when the old dears were told they could only get 100 new pence for a £ when they were used to 240!

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