Jeff Schwab <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Jeroen Ruigrok van der Werven wrote: >> -On [20080212 22:15], Dotan Cohen ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: >>> Note that Google will give a calculator result for "1 kilogram in >>> pounds", but not for "1 kilogram in inches". I wonder why not? After >>> all, both are conversions of incompatible measurements, ie, they >>> measure different things. >> >> Eh? Last I checked both pound and kilogram are units of mass, so where is >> the incompatibility? > > I've never heard of "pound" as a unit of mass. At least where I went > to school (Boston, MA), "pound" is the English unit of force, "slug" > is the (rarely used) English unit of mass, and "kilogram" is the SI > unit of mass.
It would be possible for US pound to only refer to weight, but I cannot find references to corroborate it. For example, taken from Wikipedia: In 1958 the United States and countries of the Commonwealth of Nations agreed upon common definitions for the pound and the yard. The international avoirdupois pound was defined as exactly 453.59237 grams. The "pound-force" wikipedia entry documents "pound" being used as a unit of force "in some contexts, such as structural engineering applications." -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list