But half the point of using a metric system is not needing to use decimals. It's being able to go from meter to kilometer or all the way down to nanometer, if necessary, without ever having to break down to a decimal point. That holds for every metric unit- except Celsius, where absolutely no one uses the prefixes.Maze1125 said:Okay, this whole accuracy argument is total bollocks.Callate said:A wider range makes for a more accurate description.
If you want accuracy, that's what decimals are for. They go as arbitrarily accurate as you want.
Alternatively, if you don't want to use decimals, then you clearly don't care about accuracy that much.
Either way, accuracy isn't a reasonable excuse to use imperial. You'd be far better of saying "I use imperial because I like it." That, at least, is a valid opinion.
Someone who tells you that it's going to be in the seventies in Fahrenheit has given you more information than someone who tells you that it's going to be in the thirties in Celsius. Within round numbers, someone who tells you it's currently 72 degrees has given you more information than someone who tells you it's 22 Celsius. If efficiency in communication is the point, Fahrenheit wins; if exactness is the goal, every time decimals are broken out it raises the question how many decimal places are being rounded off.
To put it still another way- if you're looking for shoes that fit, would you rather go to a shoe store that offers small, medium, and large, or sizes one through fourteen?