2x2 lumber at Home Depot is now 1.28x1.28. Actual size is supposed to be 1.5

Blackout@kbin.run to Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world – 706 points –

I dont know why they have to lie about it. At $5/8ft board you'd think I paid for the full 1.5. Edit: I mixed up nominal with actual.

271

You are viewing a single comment

You'd think so, but no.
Short story is the 'nominal' size is the size before going into a planer to smooth the faces.
Yes, it makes little sense, like many things related to construction stuff.

Yeah sorry. The tree was originally 50ft tall so we call the pieces that. But you only get 3ft

Is like buying 1200lbs steaks because that's what the cow weighs before it gets parted

Better example would be raw vs cooked weight of a 1/4lb paddy.

Exactly. Because it is easier to weigh the correct amount before cooking than find out you were wrong after.

But you should probably be feeding Patrick more.

A full bag of crisps, but a third is just air

It's not a 2x4 it's a "2x4."

And if you're a fan of quotation marks you could call it a "2"x4"."

You have to escape the quotes....

"2\"x4\"" or use differing quotes '2"x4"'

I think this is an excellent time to point out that curl quotes (“ ”) are what are typographically used for quotations and apostrophes and hash marks (" ') are what are used for feet and inches. So it would look something like:

“ 2"× 4' ”

(Spacing is still a bit ugly, I’d kern me some quote marks)

In CSV, you escape a double quote with a double quote.

Or use tsv or xsv and never quote a field again.

Sometimes we don’t get to pick what libraries and data formats we work with.

Especially with legacy systems and customer requirements.

I know. I have nothing against the format in general, as it's plain text and will always be readable. I actually prefer it to Excel sheets, although a proper database is the nicest. It's just annoying that someone chose comma, a super commonly used punctuation mark, as default field separator for csv.

1 more...
1 more...
1 more...
1 more...
14 more...