From kde-core-devel Thu Sep 19 23:08:12 2002 From: Alexander Neundorf Date: Thu, 19 Sep 2002 23:08:12 +0000 To: kde-core-devel Subject: Re: [RFC] SI Units in KDE X-MARC-Message: https://marc.info/?l=kde-core-devel&m=103247689209271 On Friday 20 September 2002 00:50, Neil Stevens wrote: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > On Thursday September 19, 2002 03:38, Ryan Cumming wrote: > > On September 19, 2002 15:19, Neil Stevens wrote: > > > > Maybe we could use "old-style" MB when the user has selected > > > > imperial as their measurement system? I can see how that could get > > > > confusing, however, as "MB" would then have two different meanings. > > > > > > Ah, so it's not only enough that you want to be able to clear > > > confuson, but you want to impose your measuring system on the whole > > > world? > > > > Where did you get that from? > > Your last sentence was backing away from the configurability, somehow > implying that the traditional use of MB is more "confusing" than the new > one. I'd also say let's keep the 1024 for sizes in bytes, people with computer knowledge know that 1 KB is 1024 byte, people who don't care, well, don't care. This is now exactly the second time that I heard from "Mibibit" (or how was it ?) and I think if we use this it will lead to really big confusion. > > > You still haven't answered one of my original questions: What does > > > ifconfig have to do with anything? > > > > ifconfig is an example of the SI units showing up in user tools. Another > > example would be du's strict-SI mode. > > ifconfig is not a user tool, and du defaults to the binary powers. 50% > split in your sample, so why don't you add a global setting to the KDE 3.2 > feature plan? Hmm, yet another config option.... Bye Alex