On Tue, Jan 12, 2016 at 8:00 AM, Eike Rathke <er...@redhat.com> wrote:
> Hi Rick, > > On Friday, 2016-01-08 19:52:49 -0500, Rick C. Hodgin wrote: > > > The category is called *"Metric."* > > > > When conveying fractional values, such that 1.2345E-08 (which is > > 0.000,000,012,345), it would do so in a metric-relative way using the > > standard milli (10^-3), micro (10^-6), nano (10^-9), pico (10^-12), and > so > > on... > > > > In the example, the *Metric* display would cause the value to show up > > as "*12,345 > > pu*" (pico-units) if the thousands separator was used. > > Could you give some examples what you think how the format code actually > should look like? > Eike, I never heard back from you after my reply. The format would be "Metric" with "Metric:seconds" given for a specific override for the units name. And there are a few other options that I would like to append including a bias that the data may already be in, such as kilo-units ("Metric[:seconds][:bias=kilo]") and an override base to use, such as always displaying in milli-units ("Metric[:seconds][:bias=kilo][affix:milli]"). In this way the base is always there: "Metric" Based on options, additional values are tagged on with colons: :unitName :bias=[tera,giga,mega,kilo,milli,micro,nano,pico] :affix=[tera,giga,mega,kilo,milli,micro,nano,pico] Is this acceptable? Am I ready to begin coding? :-) > > There would be an > > option to override the default "u" character in use, changing it into > > something that may have significance for the cell, such as "s" or > "seconds" > > for seconds, "m" or "meters" for meters, and so on. > > So, the unit itself would be a cell property, which replaces the generic > "u"? > > That sounds related to the feature branch Markus already mentioned. > > > An ability to lock in a working range would also exist, such as *"show > > everything in nano-units"* so that everything is adjusted to that base. > In > > such a case, the above example above would present as "*12.345 nu*" > instead > > of in its default *pu*. > > Where/how should that "lock-in" happen? By applying a different number > format to that range? > > > One main problem with inventing new format code features is, that they > don't survive an Excel roundtrip unless Excel has the same feature. > I guess it doesn't. > > Eike > > -- > LibreOffice Calc developer. Number formatter stricken i18n > transpositionizer. > GPG key "ID" 0x65632D3A - 2265 D7F3 A7B0 95CC 3918 630B 6A6C D5B7 6563 > 2D3A > Better use 64-bit 0x6A6CD5B765632D3A here is why: https://evil32.com/ > Care about Free Software, support the FSFE https://fsfe.org/support/?erack >
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