• @ramble81
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    421 year ago

    Doesn’t work when you don’t type it out correctly. It’s interpreting the “m” as million and “in” as inches. Use “m to ft” to get it every time

    • YMS
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      41 year ago

      There’s no correct and incorrect here. The help page (https://support.google.com/websearch/answer/3284611) doesn’t even mention which word you should use, and it of course depends on the language you use. As a German speaker, I naturally use “in”, and that always worked for me (I use this a lot), except for this example.

        • YMS
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          11 year ago

          I see that that works. In this particular case obviously better than “in”. I guess I’ll use this in the future, but I’m sticking with that this is a bug, not something inherently wrong with using “in”.

          • @ramble81
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            41 year ago

            “in” is the abbreviation for “inches” and Google will most always interpret it that way from an English language point of view. Additionally as a vernacular you usually only say “meters in feet” when your wanting to do a single unit conversion such as “how many meters are in a foot?”. Google’s language processing tends to be heavily slanted towards common English in which case some differences like that will never be considered how you want.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              Considering you’re right that that’s exactly what is happening here I can’t push this too hard, but I definitely think it’s very common and standard English to say “what’s 17.21 metres in feet?” and of course very common especially in metric countries to abbreivate metres to m. It’s also a logically odd request to want to know what 17.21 million inches are in feet with no “to” or even “in” (the in having been used up here by being assumed to mean inches) to give the query meaning. That would read as “17.21 million inches feet”.

              Google is capable of supplying a unit conversion answer for you with the “in” construction for the query “17km in miles” for example so it understands “in” in the way many of us would expect it to but weirdly assumed that ‘in’ meant inches and that the query is constructed with no grammatical indication that a conversion is even being requested which is a bit of a funny leap. It’s understandable that this might perhaps not have been anticipated exactly, in as much as perhaps it’s not surprising that it doesn’t somehow have the capacity to evaluate the likelihood of such a request over the more “common sense” interpretation but whether or not it’s understandable that this mightn’t have been foreseen I think we could reasonably call the resulting interpretation as undesireable for almost all human beings that might ever use this tool and it’s probably fair to call it a bug in that sense.

  • sgibson5150
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    11 year ago

    DDG has always been pretty good at unit conversion. Sadly, they no longer respect term exclusions in their searches. Had to go back to the G. :(

  • Célia
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    01 year ago

    It seems the unit was changed, look below the numbers

    • YMS
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      41 year ago

      But it wasn’t. I get the same result for this exact query. It seems to be like explained in another answer: Google interprets the “m” as million and the “in” as inch, so it gives you just some conversion for 17 million inches. It’s a bit random here how Google interprets things. “17.21 m in” (that one really could mean 17 million inches) is correctly taken as a meter-inch conversion, while “17.21m in” does a conversion from 17.21 meters to kilometers (where are they coming from?).