See my answer in post #34.Exactly. And since 628t is NOT a pure number (it has units of time), it CAN'T be the argument to sine or any other transcendental function.
Bob
See my answer in post #34.Exactly. And since 628t is NOT a pure number (it has units of time), it CAN'T be the argument to sine or any other transcendental function.
Why do people bend over backwards to justify continuing to be lazy and sloppy?Anybody who does not recognize the variable 't' as units of time in seconds has GOT TO BE KIDDING or way overly PEDANTIC.
't' is time in seconds when there is no other information present.
For example, do you really think time 't' could be in units of time in centuries? If you say that's possible you have no common sense relative to electronic studies. Even if you say 't' is time in weeks that's still stretching it.
But hey it's up to you declare whatever you wish but you just make this much much more complicated than it needs to be.
And I would suggest that one of the reasons that you likely forgot it is that you (like most people) are, in general, sloppy with your units. You have not trained yourself to pay attention to them at all time, and so even when you mean to use them it is easy to neglect doing so and hard for you to catch because no red warning flags go up.Well actually i forgot the little degrees symbol that is the real second form i meant.
Ok thanks for the free psychology sessionAnd I would suggest that one of the reasons that you likely forgot it is that you (like most people) are, in general, sloppy with your units. You have not trained yourself to pay attention to them at all time, and so even when you mean to use them it is easy to neglect doing so and hard for you to catch because no red warning flags go up.
Why to you feel it is necessary to criticize "most people" when you are addressing one person? Seems like a rather sloppy generalization by you.And I would suggest that one of the reasons that you likely forgot it is that you (like most people) are, in general, sloppy with your units. You have not trained yourself to pay attention to them at all time, and so even when you mean to use them it is easy to neglect doing so and hard for you to catch because no red warning flags go up.
You're more than welcome.Ok thanks for the free psychology session![]()
Because I am making a point that applies to most people. Most people ARE very sloppy with their units.Why to you feel it is necessary to criticize "most people" when you are addressing one person? Seems like a rather sloppy generalization by you.
Well thanks for the explanation, but what really happened was i just assumed that anyone that saw pi/4 and 45 in the two equations would automatically recognize the 45 as being equivalent to the pi/4 especially since i noted that they were "two forms" which really implied two forms of the same thing.You're more than welcome.
While I know that you aren't about to change your ways, hopefully there will be some folks that come across this that are at the right stage in their learning curve -- far enough along to have been bit by not tracking units many times while not so far as to have become irreversibly invested in believing that how they currently do things is the best way to do it -- to benefit from it.
And, no, that is in no way meant as a slight against you -- it's how most humans, including me, usually function. Something that we have done successfully for years becomes an ingrained way of doing things and we will tend to defend it as being perfectly correct and acceptable no matter how many flaws and pitfalls are pointed out to us. It can take something drastic, like the person standing next to you getting killed because they didn't track their units, to make you re-evaluate how you do things. Only in hindsight as you start reaping the benefits do you start to realize how truly limited your prior success actually was (or at least how much easier achieving it could have been).
One of my professors went all Nazi on us about units (which I was already very good about, but not yet a religious zealot) -- and stayed there. We either truly tracked units at each and every step of each and every problem or he simply gave us a zero on it (even if it was on an exam). That semester I went from being a 3.6 student to a 4.0 student. Years later I went back and thanked him, and I was a bit surprised by his reaction. Some of my most treasured professional moments have been the handful of times when one of my students has come back and thanked me for exactly the same thing, and after the first time I fully understood and appreciated his reaction.
You dont think you are being a bit overly pedantic though?Because I am making a point that applies to most people. Most people ARE very sloppy with their units.
But notice that this is exactly what I was referring to. We get sloppy about how we do something and get in the habit of relying on assumptions about what other people will assume, that even when we mean to explicit we tend to follow our normal habits and, because it is what we are used to, it is hard for us to spot that we did so.Well thanks for the explanation, but what really happened was i just assumed that anyone that saw pi/4 and 45 in the two equations would automatically recognize the 45 as being equivalent to the pi/4 especially since i noted that they were "two forms" which really implied two forms of the same thing.
Also, i would have probably typed "deg" or "degrees" because i am not sure where to find that little "O" degree sign on here as i dont usually need it (typing "degrees" most of the time).
Note also that when the inference is not immediately recognizable i will in fact type "degrees".
It's actually possible -- but far from guaranteed. The underlying units issue was buried pretty deep in some software that had been adapted from another project. But I've always maintained that had either Lockheed or NASA (preferably both, of course) fostered a culture of strict adherence and observation to properly tracking units that the mistake almost certainly would not have been made or would have been caught in one of the design reviews.You dont think you are being a bit overly pedantic though?
On the other hand, maybe we need somebody like you to keep pointing this out. If you were around before the 100 million plus dollars Climate Orbiter launch maybe there would not have been a mistake in units conversion and it would not have crashed which would have meant all that money would have been well spent.
Because context us meaningful here. The question was asked in the context of a physics class. Physics classes are taught with a consistent set of units.Why do people bend over backwards to justify continuing to be lazy and sloppy?
I have worked on systems where 't' was in minutes. I have worked on systems where 't' was in microseconds. It is VERY common for systems to use a unit of 't' that is keyed to the sampling period.
Except when these different groups of practitioners interact with each other, and still believe nothing is ambiguous. It can lead to inter-planetary disaster.Sloppy? Maybe so, but not ambiguous to the people involved.