the issue is that the result is written in scientific notation
Which honestly is never an issue, only people having forgotten how to fluently read it. 😛
Comment on Thanks. That was what I was looking for.
sgh@lemmy.ml 5 months agoI don’t think that’s the issue, OP also changed from 1 to 2, so I believe they basically want to know the result of 2 * 1024 * 1024, but the issue is that the result is written in scientific notation.
the issue is that the result is written in scientific notation
Which honestly is never an issue, only people having forgotten how to fluently read it. 😛
It is an issue for two reasons:
thesmokingman@programming.dev 5 months ago
When you search “megabytes to bytes” the units are correct and the number is one. If you edit the form, the number might not be one and the units might not be correct. Changing units highlights the unit input.
OP’s ostensible point posting on this community is that searching “megabytes to bytes” gave “mebibytes to bytes” in the calculator but OP’s image shows OP has changed the calculator.
sgh@lemmy.ml 5 months ago
I don’t see any reply from OP so I’m growing confident that what you’re talking about is not OP’s point.
Often times when coding you may want to quickly write down 2MB but you may need to type it in bytes, so either you calculate 210241024 while coding, or you remember the number 2097152.
Now, since 2097152 is not such a common number that one would remember, you may quickly turn to the globally acclaimed
oraclesearch engine to get such an answer, but all you get is a number in scientific notation, without an option to read it in standard decimal base. So you have to open the calculator and ask the same question again to get the answer you need.If it helps, try to ignore what’s in the search bar and tell me if it makes more sense.
jas0n@lemmy.world 5 months ago
Yeah. This was the problem. i just wanted to copy and paste it quickly but they rounded it off. It’s a useless conversion. And I switched it to mebibytes as well since that’s what everyone really means when they say megabytes unless you’re making storage devices. =]
Indeed, I should have just used my calculator program.
thesmokingman@programming.dev 5 months ago
If I ignore what’s in the search bar, I remember that the prefix “mebi” means 2^20 and use a calculator. Your point doesn’t make sense because you’re asking us to get mad at a tool intended to convert scientific units for using the bog standard scientific notation. Byte math uses powers of 2 ergo we should use a calculator that isn’t explicitly set up for rounding.
sgh@lemmy.ml 5 months ago
Are you telling me that whenever you work with Digital Storage units you should never use scientific notation?