It's not hard to figure out (which doesn't prevent some humans from misstating things, but that will always be the case).Hi there,
Yes, and my point was if we just call either one a 'gain' we don't have to worry about if it is an actual gain or an actual loss.
This is done all the time so I can't figure how why this is so hard to understand for some.
Vout=Vin*K
Is K equal to 1, or is it 0.1, or is it -1, or is it -0.2, or perhaps 10 or -12? We don't have to worry about it, just multiply it by Vin and we get the right answer every single time
I brought this up so that people would perhaps become more comfortable with this idea because after all it is used in a lot of fields, and it wasn't me who started it, it was determined long ago.
I'm having a hard time figuring out just what your point is. Are you advocating that we should always and only use "gain"?
The reason why both gain and loss (attenuation) are used is because humans are not good when working with fractional values or negative numbers or extremely large and extremely small numbers. We make a lot more mistakes. So we commonly define things so that the expected values that we will need to work with are positive numbers between 1 and 1000. If you force everyone to use "gain" in contexts where losses are the norm, then you will end up with people making more mistakes.