On August 4, 2020 1:38:43 PM MDT, Tracey Emery <tra...@traceyemery.net> wrote: >On August 4, 2020 1:24:18 PM MDT, Florian Obser <flor...@openbsd.org> >wrote: >>Because of reasons I recently had to carry a lot of garbage around for >>the municipality to pick up. They would only pickup 2 cubic meters in >>one sitting so I had to check how much I had. Turned out to be 0.9 >m^3. >> >>Of course inquisitive minds wanted to know how much that is in >>buttloads, to my great dismay units(1) did not know! >> >>So I had to do it by hand like some savage and of course I got the >>conversion wrong hence the following diff: >> >>You have: 0.9 m3 >>You want: buttloads >> * 0.53207987 >> / 1.8794171 >> >>About half a buttload, good to know. >> >>Extensive research on the subject[1] found definitions for the >>imperial buttload as well as the related metric assload. Curiously the >>assload is a measurement of mass while the buttload is a measurement >>of volume. >> >>Comments, OKs? >> >>diff --git units.lib units.lib >>index 0f811786bf3..df792a0a917 100644 >>--- units.lib >>+++ units.lib >>@@ -452,6 +452,7 @@ asb apostilb >> are 1e+2 m2 >> arpentcan 27.52 mi >> arpentlin 191.835 ft >>+assload 50 kg >> astronomicalunit AU >> atmosphere 1.01325e+5 nt/m2 >> atm atmosphere >>@@ -477,6 +478,8 @@ bolt 40 yd >> bottommeasure 1|40 in >> Bq becquerel >> britishthermalunit 1.05506e+3 joule fuzz >>+butt 2 hogsheads >>+buttload 6 seams >> btu britishthermalunit >> refrigeration 12000 btu/ton-hour >> buck dollar >> >>1) I tossed it into google and arrived at >>https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/buttload >>as well as >>https://www.ed.ac.uk/files/imports/fileManager/donkey%20fact%20sheet.pdf >> >>-- >>I'm not entirely sure you are real. > >BaaaĆ hahahahahahaha!!!!! >-- >Tracey Emery
Oh I forgot, you absolutely get an ok from me. Bahahahah, but seriously, Ok -- Tracey Emery