P.S: People who are used to sixteenths of the width of a medieval thumb, the weight of rocks used in throwing competitions and the volume of barrels way too heavy for carrying as measures should not argue earnestly in public about metric decimal units...
No offence! Peter Blodow

Am 24.02.2019 um 11:29 schrieb Peter Blodow:
Andy,
the use of those length units depends on the circle who uses them. Woodworkers use cm, metalworkers mm, opticians micrometers, nuclear scientists nanometers. The aim is to leave off unused zeroes, either in front or after the decimal point. Hectoliters are the most important measure of beer hereabouts because it is convenient to simply count barrels instead pouring beer in bulky liquid measures, and Austrian houewives buy their sausage and meat in Deka's.

By the way, the Gramm is very well named after a dead scientist: Saxo Grammaticus, living in the middle ages around 1100, famous Danish historian, who wrote a history of Denmark in 16 volumes. He even attempted to write an English grammar - English and Danish were not so far apart in those days -, but failed because it would have become too heavy for the reason of the many exceptions to its rules (at the time, there were such). Therefore, the unit of weight was named after him.

My best regards!
Peter Blodow
Dipl.-Phys.

Am 24.02.2019 um 10:31 schrieb andy pugh:

The hecto, centi, deci, deka  are deprecated in SI, so cm should not be
used.

I am a bit annoyed that the base mass unit is the kg, ie that it has an
embedded prefix. That is one unit that could very usefully be named after a
dead scientist.





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