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Split Thread Conspiracy theories about unconventional usage of notation

Er, no.

JesseCuster has already explained your mistake to you, but I'll do so again if it'll help (it probably won't, if precedent is anything to go by...):

You wrote: 6ft, 2' ⅛ "

But

1) When using prime notation on imperial units of length, the single prime always - without exception - applies to the number of feet; and

2) You've split the notation for the 2 and the ⅛, whereas in the concept you're trying to express, they both apply to the same unit (here, inches: two and one-eighth inches).

What you've written above, as JesseCuster pointed out, is actually:

6 feet, 2 feet, ⅛ inch (which equates to 8 feet, ⅛ inch)


(Not to mention your mistake in using two different notification systems within the same number, which never happens...)

You totally miscomprehend. My example, was what happens when one follows JayUtah's edict in the post I was replying to. Do try to remain in context. I was pointing out that you do not need to state 'ft' likewise the notation 'hr' for hour is just to differentiate it from feet and inches; it is nonsense to state it is needed to determine the base.
 
Indeed, my goal in this thread is to get Vixen to admit she made a mistake, instead of "admitting" to nothing more errant than using the acceptable notation apparently common in her part of the kingdom: specifically that part of the U.K. situated entirely between her ears. Just a simple, "Whoops, I meant to indicate minutes but I used the wrong symbol--sorry!"

Failing that, I plan to be entertained further by her increasingly hubristic and absurd attempts to save face. There is nothing more amusing than a person committed to tying themselves in knots.

I don't 'admit' I 'made a mistake' because I know I am right. I get that not everybody will have used that notation and is more for written notes rather than in formal reports. Just because someone has never come across the notation for time duration doesn't mean it is incorrect.
 
No, we were talking about a physical ship, not directions. In any case port and starboard are separated by the hull so n'er the twain shall meet, let alone be perpendicular to each other.


You're really doubling down on wrong, aren't you?

In fact, port and starboard do meet. They meet at an imaginary line projecting forwards (and backwards, for that matter) from the central longitudinal axis of the ship.

To say that "port and starboard are separated by the hull" is ludicrous nonsense.
 
I don't 'admit' I 'made a mistake' because I know I am right. I get that not everybody will have used that notation and is more for written notes rather than in formal reports. Just because someone has never come across the notation for time duration doesn't mean it is incorrect.


Ah, the old "I know I am right" gambit, huh?

Tell you what: how about you supply some reliable evidence of your rectitude on this matter. I'm suspecting that you've already looked pretty exhaustively and found nothing, amirite?

And do you know why you'll never find any reliable evidence supporting your claim? It's because.... your claim is flat wrong. You are wrong. And you refuse to admit you're wrong. It's quite something to observe.

But yeah, evidence?
 
You totally miscomprehend. My example, was what happens when one follows JayUtah's edict in the post I was replying to. Do try to remain in context. I was pointing out that you do not need to state 'ft' likewise the notation 'hr' for hour is just to differentiate it from feet and inches; it is nonsense to state it is needed to determine the base.


Nope. You're tying yourself up in ever-more-jaw-dropping (mph x 1.151*) of ineptitude. It's beyond doubt by this point that you have no grasp of this subject, and with every post you only serve to reinforce further that conclusion.


* I shamelessly repeat my little measurement-unit wordplay here, for those of us who actually understand it.....
 
Holy crap.

That diagram is showing - and is ONLY showing - the method of drawing (on a flat surface, eg a piece of paper) a line which is exactly perpendicular to a given reference line, where the perpendicular passes through the point P, using only a straight edge and a compass.

It has nothing whatsoever to do with ships, ships' hull shapes, or the port and starboard of maritime usage.

This is getting beyond ridiculous.

Please refer to technical drawings of a ship's metacentre instead of faking inability to comprehend.

https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/engineering/metacentre
 
Ah, the old "I know I am right" gambit, huh?

Tell you what: how about you supply some reliable evidence of your rectitude on this matter. I'm suspecting that you've already looked pretty exhaustively and found nothing, amirite?

And do you know why you'll never find any reliable evidence supporting your claim? It's because.... your claim is flat wrong. You are wrong. And you refuse to admit you're wrong. It's quite something to observe.

But yeah, evidence?

Why is it so important to you to browbeat me into accepting your view that such notations are not used for durations of time?
 
A ship is not flat like a raft. The sides are not perpendicular to each other because a ship is more of a semi-circular shape; not a straight line, which would be 180°, anyway, and nor a right-angled V-shape.

Port and starboard don't refer to the outer sufaces of the hull. They are directions relative to the orientation of the vessel, analagous to left and right for (eg) a human.

The shape of the vessel doesn't affect them, in the same way that holding your arms up at 45 degrees, to form a 'v'-shape doesn't effect left and right.

HTH.
 
Perhaps a link would help?
Perhaps I shall lay out the discussion that lead to your claim that you were quoting other posters on the forum.]

Here is your original post:

Vixen said:
A bit like:
a ship can float on its side once it lists over its centre of buoyance: just like Herald of Free Enterprise! (Actually, resting on a bank!)
A ship's cannonball in Nelson's day 'cannot have travelled at 900mph'!
an EPIRB has to be switched on by one of the Captain's mates before it works!
You can't use base sixty notation for hours, minutes and seconds!
a bow visor will fall off if hit by a strong wave!
a ship 155m long will sink with no trace within 0.35' because all of the windows on the listed side will have smashed thus letting in water rapidly!80m is too deep to recover a wreck or the bodies!
there were no telephone or radio signals between 01:00 and 02:02 because of the 'storm' (only Beaufort 7)!
It takes over two hours for a rescue helicopter to fly from either Helsinki or Visby, or Stockholm after an official mayday call from an MRCC!!!
Eleven crew listed as rescued on rescuers lists suddenly are not rescued after all!
Helicopter Y64 went to pick up a nurse and a doctor from Stockholm via Visby first before going to the rescue!!!

This was followed by Jack by the Hedge saying the following:

Jack by the Hedge said:
Blimey. It's the straw cavalry arriving at the Gish gallop.

JayUtah then said:

JayUtah said:
Yes, a full fringe reset of all the topics on which Vixen has confirmed her ignorance and on which she has proven to be entirely uneducable. But woe betide any who question her, for they are morally bankrupt.

To which you replied:

Vixen said:
I was quoting other posters. Was it not clear? That list doesn't refer to my ignorance. However, the howlers have given me a jolly good laugh.

So you claimed that the list above was you quoting other posters.

So I'll ask again, who were you quoting when you said

Vixen said:
a ship 155m long will sink with no trace within 0.35' because all of the windows on the listed side will have smashed thus letting in water rapidly!
A link to the post where you quoted that from would be helpful.
 
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I don't 'admit' I 'made a mistake' because I know I am right.

You are not.

I get that not everybody will have used that notation...

Nobody uses your notation. That's because you made it up on the fly and are now trying to bluff your way along.

Just because someone has never come across the notation for time duration doesn't mean it is incorrect.

Your notation is incorrect, for the many reasons given which you choose not to address. What part of "I used to teach this subject in college" was unclear to you? Do you honestly think people can't tell when you're lying and bluffing?
 
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No, we were talking about a physical ship, not directions. In any case port and starboard are separated by the hull so n'er the twain shall meet, let alone be perpendicular to each other.

And yet, that's exactly what you did say.

A boat is only a half circle in shape, thus if port is at 45° and starboard at 135°, it is indeed standing perpendicular to the deck and now parallel with the water's surface when turned 90°.

If port is at 45° and starboard at 135°, they are at 90° to each other which is, as you have already conceded, perpendicular.
 
You totally miscomprehend.

No. You're the one who has misunderstood.

My example, was what happens when one follows JayUtah's edict in the post I was replying to. Do try to remain in context.

There was no "edict." I stated that one way to establish context for the primes was to state the canonical base unit. It is by no means the only or required way, and the base unit may certainly be omitted if it is zero or if the notation is not normalized. In my post I gave examples of when context alone determines the meaning of the primes, without the need to state a base unit.

This is my second attempt to correct your error.

Stating some other base unit does not change the meaning of the cuts. The foot is not the base unit of length for primes notation; that is the yard. Your attempt to mix ft with primes notation is nonsensical and incorrect.

I was pointing out that you do not need to state 'ft' likewise the notation 'hr' for hour is just to differentiate it from feet and inches; it is nonsense to state it is needed to determine the base.

And for the second time, a requirement to state a base unit is something you made up and are trying to pin on me. I know the standard. I said no such thing.
 
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Please refer to technical drawings of a ship's metacentre instead of faking inability to comprehend.

https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/engineering/metacentre

Bluff and bluster, as well as irrelevant to the point being made.

We tested your ability to comprehend the meaning of this drawing and its physics. You weren't competent. You couldn't even restate the basics of the model without mistaking the difference between points and lines.

Further, I asked you several followup questions intended to see whether you really did understand the mechanics at work. You ignored the questions.

On every subject in this side thread, you have demonstrated that you don't know what you're talking about. We can tell. And your determination to proceed by bluster alone gives us ample evidence that your claim to moral superiority is just another blustery pretext. We are testing your honesty. You're failing.
 
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Why is it so important to you to browbeat me into accepting your view that such notations are not used for durations of time?

Because it's important to debate only with participants who are honest and will admit errors when the evidence of the error is shown to them. You will not admit even the smallest error on your part, so we have no reason to trust that you will concede any other point, nor respect any evidence that disagrees with your belief. Therefore the choice between whether to debate you or mock you becomes clearer with every post you make.

You have pretended that you are competent to discuss the sinking of MS Estonia and the investigations that followed. Further you have pretended a high moral station for your willingness to challenge those investigations. Instead we find that your exercise here is more consistent with pretending to be something you're not and hoping that people will give you credit for it. It's childish and dishonest.

You insist that ″ can be used to note minutes of time. You are wrong. I know that you are wrong, because I know the standard. I know the standards because it's part of my professional licensing, and because I was responsible for teaching that subject among others at a major American university.

I suspect you know you're wrong, too, but you insist on saving face. For now, we're playing your game. Therefore kindly supply us with evidence that anyone else in the world besides you has used ″ to indicate minutes of time. Then maybe we can consider that you are honest enough to take seriously.

Put up or shut up.
 
You insist that ″ can be used to note minutes of time. You are wrong. I know that you are wrong, because I know the standard. I know the standards because it's part of my professional licensing, and because I was responsible for teaching that subject among others at a major American university.

Moreover, Vixen insists that such use was taught as part of her education, which was (as far as I can recall) in UK O levels. There are many of us here who were taught exactly the same syllabus, myself included, who can say that that was never taught as a standard.

I also trained as a maths and science teacher and have textbooks from that period which do not mention such a standard. I have taught maths and science in UK secondary schools, and still to this day tutor GCSE and A level maths and sciences for UK students. When I wasn't teaching, I was working as a research scientist dealing directly with various units of time and angles.

Through all of that I have never once come across such a notation.

There is absolutely no standard or notation in which 0.35" could possibly mean 35 minutes. None.

If Vixen was taught that (which I find unlikely but not impossible) it was taught in error by someone who didn't know what they were talking about. More likely is that Vixen misunderstood what was taught and is unwilling to admit to that misunderstanding.
 
Moreover, Vixen insists that such use was taught as part of her education, which was (as far as I can recall) in UK O levels. There are many of us here who were taught exactly the same syllabus, myself included, who can say that that was never taught as a standard.

I also trained as a maths and science teacher and have textbooks from that period which do not mention such a standard. I have taught maths and science in UK secondary schools, and still to this day tutor GCSE and A level maths and sciences for UK students. When I wasn't teaching, I was working as a research scientist dealing directly with various units of time and angles.

Through all of that I have never once come across such a notation.

There is absolutely no standard or notation in which 0.35" could possibly mean 35 minutes. None.

If Vixen was taught that (which I find unlikely but not impossible) it was taught in error by someone who didn't know what they were talking about. More likely is that Vixen misunderstood invented what was taught and is unwilling to admit to that misunderstanding total fabrication.

ftfy

I'm in a similar boat, though after 7 years of school physics I headed off in the direction of biology at Uni and later on teaching. I never encountered the notation that Vixen is claiming to have been taught.
 
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I was highlighting JayUtah's claim that you must at the first digit state the unit...

Here's the relevant paragraph from the post to which you refer, which clearly states that I do not claim the canonical base unit must be specified in order to establish what extent is being measured.

Context can never redefine what the base unit is for some particular extent. Otherwise the system collapses. Context properly established, we sometimes omit the base unit if its value is zero and we don't therefore need the abbreviation to further expand the context. We don't need to properly title our musical composition 0h 4′ 33″, because we establish by other means that the context is time duration. What is meant thereafter by the primes is unassailably unambiguous.

And let's revisit the gaffe that has amused so many.
Thank you for confirming that it would not be correct to write 6ft, 2' ⅛ ", as I was pointing out.

But let's restore the full context. You wrote
Nota Bene: when using the notation for feet and inches, the feet immediate become first prime. There is no need to state, say, 6ft, 2' ⅛ ". It is just 6'2 ⅛".

Your objection is not that 6 ft 2′ ⅛″ is nonsensical--which it is--but that it's over-specified (yet apparently otherwise acceptable). And that opinion is driven by the apparent belief that you can willy-nilly restate the canonical base units for some extent and thereby change what the first and subsequent cuts mean.

You emphatically cannot.

Your ongoing duplicity on this point is illustrated by statements such as the following.

Vixen said:
Only if you want to make clear yards are being brought into it. Then that works for me: 3' 2" 11"' as long as we are all clear the first is in yards. Saves an awful lot of writing things out in full.

Establishing that "the first is in yards" is unnecessary. The base unit for length is yards--never anything else. Hence ′ is always feet, the first cut; ″ is always inches, the second cut. Yes, we habitually keep such measurements unnormalized, and therefore habitually omit naming yards as the nominal unit. But the immutability of the yard as the canonical base unit of length is the authority by which ′ and ″ keep their immutable meanings as feet and inches. We seem to properly agree on this point.

Hours, minutes, and seconds work the same way, despite your self-serving equivocation.

It's unclear whether you consider 6 ft 2′ ⅛″ to be improper because it nominates a different base unit or because it employs redundant indicators: both names and primes for feet. Both are mistakes, but unraveling your gyrations proves difficult. If you say 6 ft, you're not using primes notation for length. Why? Because it's using nominal abbreviations for what, in primes notation, would only properly be identified by a prime. Neither 6 ft 2′ nor 6 ft 2″ is meaningful because the named unit is not the right one.

If you're using primes notation and if you include a nominal unit, then the named unit must be the canonical base unit. Otherwise the notation is inconsistent and therefore incorrect. That is not a requirement to use a nominal/canonical base unit in all cases.

As we've belabored, nothing illustrates this better than the preference of feet to yards. The meanings of the primes don't change, even though we omit the nominal units and denormalize the quantity of feet.

But then you say
Vixen said:
Like[]wise if you state one day to be first base then 1' 20" easily translates into one day 20 hours, if you want to write shorthand for the rest of the piece.

You cannot do this. You can no more renominate the canonical base unit for time (hours) any more than you can renominate the base unit for length (yards) or angles (degrees). ′ is an unambiguous measurement of length because it's always the first cut of the canonical base unit, even when the base unit is omitted. ′ is an unambiguous measurement of an angle because the canonical base unit never changes, and therefore the meaning of its first cut never changes. ′ is an unambiguous measurement of time because its canonical base unit (hours) never changes.

Even still you can't get the terminology right. There is a "base unit" and there is a "first cut." There is no such thing as a "first base," except in American baseball and canoodling. The base unit of time is the hour, abbreviated nominally as h. This never changes. The first cut of time is the minute, defined as 1/60 of an hour and noted immutably in primes notation by a single prime ′. This, too, does not change. The second cut of a hour is seconds of time. That's literally why it's called "seconds."

By the same logic that lets us omit yards and write feet and inches solely with primes, we can omit hours and write minutes and seconds unambiguously using primes.

In an attempt to justify your original error, you insinuate that we can simply renominate days as the base unit for time. You suggest that doing this redefines the first cut to be hours and the second cut, notated ″, to be minutes. Therefore your usage 35″ should have been properly understood as "thirty-five minutes."

No. You cannot do this.

Not only did you give no indication whatsoever that you wanted a recontextualization to make days to be the new base unit of time, your own explanation of feet and inches belies that you know you cannot renominate a base unit without introducing the very ambiguity that the primes notation was invented to avoid. You concede that feet and inches are immutably and unambiguously identified using ′ and ″, and you even give the correct reason why. But then you abandon the whole system and claim that none of those rules should be in force while you tacitly and arbitrarily redefine what the symbols mean when measuring time instead of distance or angles.

Why? The reason is obvious. You wrote 35″ when you meant "thirty-five minutes," and refuse to concede that you didn't know that was the wrong notation.

Your first ruse was to insist that this is a perfectly ordinary convention--a bluff. Then when you compounded your error by writing 0.35″, at first you didn't even see the problem. Then when it was spelled out to you in excruciating detail, you deployed the second nonsensical explanation: that the 0. portion was somehow a cobbled-up way to express hours, and therefore to disambiguate the primes. When that fell flat you said
It is something I have always done. I had no idea you and others had never heard of it.

That's a backhanded concession. We went from an alternative convention to simply "something [you] have always done," irrespective of what others might have done. You insinuate that different education produces different convention that explains your usage, but your fellow Britons have contradicted you. You even insinuate that it's our fault we've never heard of this singular, confusing exception to the rules of a system that was in widespread usage for hundreds of years.

Here's how we know this is bollocks.

Do you remember your idiom of the FX prefix? Remember how you claimed it was common notation in screenplays? It isn't. After pages and pages of refutation, you finally fell back to the notion that FX was just something you personally used among your girlfriends. And here we are again. After first claiming your usage was proper according to standard or convention, you've fallen back to the irrefutable, "Well, it's just what I use." Your first inclination whenever any error is pointed out to you is to double- or triple-down and insist that you are still right even when the evidence of your error is plain. Your first inclination is to lie. Only much later, if ever, do you come clean and contradict your first lies by admitting that your usage is just your personal habit. I suppose in your mind that equates to something like, "I can't be wrong if it's something I've always done and was never contradicted."

I assure you a Vixen-only "convention" can most certainly be an error. And it very much is in this case. What you propose to do is contradicted by the standard you say you are conforming to. You are simply wrong, full stop.

Why are we so focused on what are, by any metric, insignificant errors? Precisely because they are insignificant. You lose little if any face to say, "Oh, I just thought that's what FX meant," or "Oops, I wrote ″ when I meant ′," or, "I misspoke when I said 'perpendicular." People will see that you're amenable to contrary facts, and that you will adjust your beliefs accordingly. Further, even very knowledgeable people make silly, inattentive mistakes. They are corrected, and they accept it graciously, and their credibility hardly suffers. Your insufferable insistence on a mantle of infallibility is pathological.

What we learn about you in this thread is that under no circumstances will you retract a statement that is shown to be wrong. Instead, you will go to extreme lengths and tell all kinds of lies in order to maintain the illusion that you are still somehow right. And yes, we can tell that you do this. If you are legitimately believing your lies, then you have serious issues we can't address in this forum. Whatever that posture, it is clear to all of us that maintaining the illusion that you're infallible is more important to you than actually having the correct facts and arriving at well-reasoned conclusions.

This means you're neither technically nor morally qualified to question other people's expert work. You cannot be trusted to respect facts, or the people who know them better than you do. Hence until you can show some semblance of intellectual honesty, you're more likely to be mocked at this forum than debated.
 
Moreover, Vixen insists that such use was taught as part of her education, which was (as far as I can recall) in UK O levels. There are many of us here who were taught exactly the same syllabus, myself included, who can say that that was never taught as a standard.

We don't teach high-schoolers (roughly equivalent to U.K. O-levels) the primes notation for time. But I (and probably others) learned it independently then, in my case because I saw historical reports of athletic events that gave times in that notation. I inferred the meanings properly because primes for angular subdivisions are taught in American high schools.

The first section of the FE exam--the first of two licensing exams for engineers--is all about measurement systems. The preparatory materials for that exam delve deeply and broadly into the history and method of measurement, including primes. Primes for time is mentioned as an historical usage, no longer much used and no part of any modern engineering or scientific standard for time. But because primes notation for other extents is part of a number of modern standards, the theory behind the system is part of the education. American engineers have to know more than just how it works; they have to know why it works. Why it works is that the primes never change meaning.

Through all of that I have never once come across such a notation.

Our silent musical piece is a salient example, but it was named back in the 1950s, roughly coincident with the date of the materials I first saw using it. So we have sort of two questions. The first is whether primes notation is or was ever used to reckon time. It was, and there was a standard. Not so much anymore. The second is whether Vixen's use of primes notation for time is correct. It is not.

There is absolutely no standard or notation in which 0.35" could possibly mean 35 minutes. None.

Agreed. That's pure invention on Vixen's part, apparently to concoct a story for why her various misuses and errors should not be considered evidence of her ineptitude.

If Vixen was taught that (which I find unlikely but not impossible) it was taught in error by someone who didn't know what they were talking about. More likely is that Vixen misunderstood what was taught and is unwilling to admit to that misunderstanding.

I prefer to follow parsimony: she's making stuff up in order to appear more competent than she is, and making up more stuff to cover the mistakes in the stuff she made up previously. This has been her pattern.
 

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