Computer science. Screw your polls!
@Mini_moose
Careful, or I might sick my cuttlefish at you
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The cuttlefish kill physicists in a dream sequence and XKCD is conspiring with biology majors to kill chemists. I fail to see any threat or relevance to mathematicians.
An artist's depiction of an Extended Unit Death
Moved this to a cooler subforum.
Physics.
Chemistry is maths with letters. Physics is maths with graphs.
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Responsible for my own happiness? I can't even be responsible for my own breakfast
Computer science. Screw your polls!
The cuttlefish kill physicists in a dream sequence and XKCD is conspiring with biology majors to kill chemists. I fail to see any threat or relevance to mathematicians.
We'd be too busy measuring exactly how well the shell models φ anyway.
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Chemistry is maths with letters.
Clearly you've never done real math before
The only place you're allowed to use numbers in math is subscripts and superscripts.
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Why does he keep saying things in terms of cubic meters? Is using mL taboo?
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Why does he keep saying things in terms of cubic meters? Is using mL taboo?
I've actually wondered this for awhile. Why do you hear in medical shows "i need 10 CC's of bladyblah"?
"If a topic that clearly interest noone needs to be closed to underline the "we don't want this here" message, is up to debate."
-NudeRaider
Why does he keep saying things in terms of cubic meters? Is using mL taboo?
I've actually wondered this for awhile. Why do you hear in medical shows "i need 10 CC's of bladyblah"?
Well he didn't even say CC, just "cubic centimeter". Bothers me.
Then again that's not the only thing that bothers me in chemistry. There's also the official scientific notation of, say, 6.022 × 10²³ instead of the clearly superior calculator notation of 6.022e23 (or 6.022
E23). The e can't even be confused with the natural number
e because variables and constants aren't written before numbers.
I mean it pretty much goes against every good habit you learn in mathematics and adds useless length to numbers. Like not using × to represent multiplication because it could be mistaken for an x, or not using · (interpunct) because it could be mistaken for a decimal. Parenthesis, as I have been taught, are the safe way to clearly indicate that a number is being multiplied if juxtaposition is insufficient.
But every professor I've asked was okay with me doing it this way, so long as I wrote a note on my tests and graded homework.
(╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
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Why does he keep saying things in terms of cubic meters? Is using mL taboo?
I've actually wondered this for awhile. Why do you hear in medical shows "i need 10 CC's of bladyblah"?
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=CC+measurement+unitNone of those links remotely addressed the question.
Rather unfortunate that I have to expand upon a purposefully short answer.
4th linkThe volume measurement unit cc (cubic centimeter) is usually replaced by the liquid volume measure unit ml (milliliter).
^ so a CC is a cubic cm and is the same as a ml
If that wasn't enough...
8th LinkIn many scientific fields, the use of cubic centimetres has been replaced by the millilitre. The medical and automotive fields are two of the few fields wherein the term cubic centimetre was never discontinued in the United States.
TheNitesWhoSay - Clan Aura -
githubReached the top of StarCraft theory crafting 2:12 AM CST, August 2nd, 2014.
Rather unfortunate that you didn't understand the question. Everyone here already knows what "CC" stands for.
It's quite fine to use cubic centimeter, since it's the same as mL anyway.
What bugs me is that the dude in the video uses cubic centimeter AND cubic decimeters
please just use liters or just stick to one unit. Even if it's because the concentrations greatly vary, it's still easier and better to hear someone say "number times 10 to the power of number" than hear random units being spouted.
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