Stop being rude, and learn how to write "anyway" in your first and
only language, which turns out to be my third one.
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I wasn't being rude, I was being insulting, and English is neither
my first nor my only language, so it turns out that it's _you_ who's
being pretentious, as well as presumptuous.
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Learn also to put
the commas inside the quotation marks, and to leave a space between
the numerical value and unit symbol
(
http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/checklist.html #15).
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The commas aren't being quoted, they're being used to separate the
quotes, so in this case they belong on the outside of the quotes.
Depending on context and how I feel, sometimes I prefer to abut the
symbol to the value, and since neither you nor anyone else seems to
have any problem deciphering my meaning, I'll continue to do it that
way, thank you very much.
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If you can't
use your own language, don't be so pretentious.
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Hmmm... I think we covered both of those subjects earlier.
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Of course I can multiply, and what I do is none of your business.
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Well, of course you can multiply, but it seems you have trouble with
what the products mean. That is, since one of the posters wrote
that he had a 12.5kW cooker which was connected to 240V 60A mains,
it should have been obvious that, since:
P = IE
Where P is power in watts,
I is current in amperes, and
E is voltage in volts, RMS
The mains could supply:
P = IE = 60A * 240V = 14.4kW.
Now, since he stated that his cooker used 12.5kW, it should have
been a simple matter of subtracting 12.5kW from 14.4kW to find that
the difference was 1900 watts, with the mains having that reserve.
Oh, you figured it out eventually, and then pouted about it with
this gem:
"Ok, I may end up believing that you have access to 60 A @ 240 V.
But I find it... surprising... that you guys use 12.5 kW cookers.
That's a hell of power. And ok, even if that was the case, I could
never call that "reasonable."
Like anybody gives a shit about what you consider reasonable.
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