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quantifiersmore about quantifiers

quantifiers


  1  definition  found 
 
  From  Jargon  File  (4.2.3,  23  NOV  2000)  [jargon]: 
 
  quantifiers  In  techspeak  and  jargon,  the  standard  metric 
  prefixes  used  in  the  SI  (Syste`me  International)  conventions  for 
  scientific  measurement  have  dual  uses.  With  units  of  time  or  things  that 
  come  in  powers  of  10,  such  as  money,  they  retain  their  usual  meanings 
  of  multiplication  by  powers  of  1000  =  10^3.  But  when  used  with  bytes 
  or  other  things  that  naturally  come  in  powers  of  2,  they  usually  denote 
  multiplication  by  powers  of  1024  =  2^(10). 
 
  Here  are  the  SI  magnifying  prefixes,  along  with  the  corresponding 
  binary  interpretations  in  common  use: 
 
  prefix  decimal  binary  kilo-  1000^1  1024^1  =  2^10  =  1,024 
 
  mega-  1000^2  1024^2  =  2^20  =  1,048,576 
 
  giga-  1000^3  1024^3  =  2^30  =  1,073,741,824 
 
  tera-  1000^4  1024^4  =  2^40  =  1,099,511,627,776 
 
  peta-  1000^5  1024^5  =  2^50  =  1,125,899,906,842,624 
 
  exa-  1000^6  1024^6  =  2^60  =  1,152,921,504,606,846,976 
 
  zetta-  1000^7  1024^7  =  2^70  =  1,180,591,620,717,411,303,424 
 
  yotta-  1000^8  1024^8  =  2^80  =  1,208,925,819,614,629,174,706,176 
 
  Here  are  the  SI  fractional  prefixes: 
 
  _prefix  decimal  jargon  usage_  milli-  1000^-1  (seldom  used  in  jargon) 
  micro-  1000^-2  small  or  human-scale  (see  {micro-})  nano-  1000^-3  even 
  smaller  (see  {nano-})  pico-  1000^-4  even  smaller  yet  (see  {pico-}) 
  femto-  1000^-5  (not  used  in  jargon---yet)  atto-  1000^-6  (not  used 
  in  jargon---yet)  zepto-  1000^-7  (not  used  in  jargon---yet)  yocto- 
  1000^-8  (not  used  in  jargon---yet) 
 
  The  prefixes  zetta-,  yotta-,  zepto-,  and  yocto-  have  been  included 
  in  these  tables  purely  for  completeness  and  giggle  value;  they  were 
  adopted  in  1990  by  the  `19th  Conference  Generale  des  Poids  et  Mesures'. 
  The  binary  peta-  and  exa-  loadings,  though  well  established,  are  not  in 
  jargon  use  either  --  yet  The  prefix  milli-,  denoting  multiplication 
  by  1/1000,  has  always  been  rare  in  jargon  (there  is  however,  a  standard 
  joke  about  the  `millihelen'  --  notionally,  the  amount  of  beauty  required 
  to  launch  one  ship).  See  the  entries  on  {micro-},  {pico-},  and  {nano-} 
  for  more  information  on  connotative  jargon  use  of  these  terms.  `Femto' 
  and  `atto'  (which,  interestingly,  derive  not  from  Greek  but  from  Danish) 
  have  not  yet  acquired  jargon  loadings,  though  it  is  easy  to  predict  what 
  those  will  be  once  computing  technology  enters  the  required  realms  of 
  magnitude  (however,  see  {attoparsec}). 
 
  There  are  of  course,  some  standard  unit  prefixes  for  powers  of 
  10.  In  the  following  table,  the  `prefix'  column  is  the  international 
  standard  suffix  for  the  appropriate  power  of  ten  the  `binary'  column 
  lists  jargon  abbreviations  and  words  for  the  corresponding  power  of  2. 
  The  B-suffixed  forms  are  commonly  used  for  byte  quantities;  the  words 
  `meg'  and  `gig'  are  nouns  that  may  (but  do  not  always)  pluralize  with  `s'. 
 
  prefix  decimal  binary  pronunciation  kilo-  k  K,  KB  /kay/  mega-  M  M, 
  MB  meg  /meg/  giga-  G  G,  GB  gig  /gig/,/jig/ 
 
  Confusingly,  hackers  often  use  K  or  M  as  though  they  were  suffix  or 
  numeric  multipliers  rather  than  a  prefix;  thus  "2K  dollars",  "2M  of 
  disk  space".  This  is  also  true  (though  less  commonly)  of  G. 
 
  Note  that  the  formal  SI  metric  prefix  for  1000  is  `k';  some  use 
  this  strictly,  reserving  `K'  for  multiplication  by  1024  (KB  is  thus 
  `kilobytes'). 
 
  K,  M,  and  G  used  alone  refer  to  quantities  of  bytes;  thus  64G  is 
  64  gigabytes  and  `a  K'  is  a  kilobyte  (compare  mainstream  use  of  `a  G' 
  as  short  for  `a  grand',  that  is  $1000).  Whether  one  pronounces  `gig' 
  with  hard  or  soft  `g'  depends  on  what  one  thinks  the  proper  pronunciation 
  of  `giga-'  is 
 
  Confusing  1000  and  1024  (or  other  powers  of  2  and  10  close  in 
  magnitude)  --  for  example,  describing  a  memory  in  units  of  500K  or  524K 
  instead  of  512K  --  is  a  sure  sign  of  the  {marketroid}.  One  example  of 
  this:  it  is  common  to  refer  to  the  capacity  of  3.5"  {microfloppies}  as 
  `1.44  MB'  In  fact  this  is  a  completely  {bogus}  number.  The  correct 
  size  is  1440  KB  that  is  1440  *  1024  =  1474560  bytes.  So  the  `mega' 
  in  `1.44  MB'  is  compounded  of  two  `kilos',  one  of  which  is  1024  and  the 
  other  of  which  is  1000.  The  correct  number  of  megabytes  would  of  course 
  be  1440  /  1024  =  1.40625.  Alas,  this  fine  point  is  probably  lost  on 
  the  world  forever. 
 
  [1993  update:  hacker  Morgan  Burke  has  proposed,  to  general 
  approval  on  Usenet,  the  following  additional  prefixes: 
 
  groucho 
  10^(-30) 
 
  harpo 
  10^(-27) 
 
  harpi 
  10^(27) 
 
  grouchi 
  10^(30) 
 
  We  observe  that  this  would  leave  the  prefixes  zeppo-,  gummo-,  and  chico- 
  available  for  future  expansion.  Sadly,  there  is  little  immediate  prospect 
  that  Mr  Burke's  eminently  sensible  proposal  will  be  ratified.] 
 
  [1999  upate:  there  is  an  IEC  proposal 
  (ftp://ftp.informatik.uni-erlangen.de/pub/doc/ISO/information-units) 
  for  binary  multipliers,  but  no  evidence  that  any  of  its  proposals  are 
  in  live  use.] 
 
 




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