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The Logic Behind Metric Paper Sizes

Oily Pakora writes "Those of us in the United States are so used to our Letter and Legal paper sizes. We've seen the A4 paper size option in our printer trays and in printer preference menus. Metric sizes used almost everywhere in the world, save for the US and Canada. Here is an interesting article that discusses all of the aspects of metric paper. For those who enjoy a bit of math, did you know that in the Metric paper system, the height-to-width ratio of all pages is the square root of 2? This means that you can place two sheets of A4 side-by-side and they will equal an A3 sheet exactly, and two sheets of A3 will equal an A2."

7 of 1,461 comments (clear)

  1. Side-by-sideness by TyrelHaveman · · Score: 5, Informative

    You can also put two 8.5x11 (Letter) sheets of paper side by side and it equals an 11x17 (Tabloid) sheet of paper...

    1. Re:Side-by-sideness by SSpade · · Score: 5, Informative

      But 11x17 is not the same shape as 8 1/2x11.

      That's the real beauty of A4/A3 etc. All the sizes in a given series (A00, A0, A1, A2, A3, A4, A5... or B1, B2, B3...) are the same shape.

      So you can photocopy an A4 document onto A3 paper expanding it by the right proportion and it'll fit perfectly. And you can copy two A4 documents onto A3 paper and it'll fit perfectly. Or use psnup to put A4 formatted documents reduced to 2-up on A4 paper with no wasted space.

      Try that with letter or legal size....

  2. Re:Drugs teach American kids the metric system. by compro01 · · Score: 5, Informative

    if i remember corectly a "hogshead" is 63 gallons.

    and a rod is 5.5 yards or 16.5 feets so....

    damn your car is a gas guzzeler!

    504 gallons to go 1 mile!

    --
    upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
  3. Re:Yet another reason for the US to switch to metr by SkankhodBeeblebrox · · Score: 5, Informative
    Your government did try to switch over, not once, not twice, but three times! (with limited success, according to the 2nd link)

    Also according to that 2nd link,
    "Federal agencies were required by this legislation, with certain exceptions, to use the metric system in their procurement, grants and other business-related activities by the end of 1992. "


    Not sure what that means to a typical U.S. Citizen, but it appears the U.S. will be metric someday :)
  4. Re:2 x A4 = A3 by chris_mahan · · Score: 5, Informative

    a square meter. a square meter is the base of a cube meter. The cube meter is the volume of one ton of fresh water at sea level at the equator at zero degrees Celcius. 1 ton is 1000 kilo gram. each kilo gram is thus 10cm*10cm*10cm, which happens to also be a liter. 1 gram is 1 millionth of a ton, of 1cm*1cm*1cm. so if a bottle of water is 1000 grams (1 kilo gram), it is also 1 liter. So now I know the volume, the weight, and the measurement of the container. Pretty nifty no?
    Density is expressed in a ratio from fresh water at zero degrees at sea level at the equator. Let's say the density of velveta cheese is 1.001. With this, I could tell you the size of a kilo of velveeta, and how large a container to use, and thus how much paper to use to wrap it in. Then I could express this in how many per A0, A1, or A2, since they are derived from the meter. Get it?

    Class dismissed.

    --

    "Piter, too, is dead."

  5. Re:A complex way to point out simplity. by Tony-A · · Score: 5, Informative

    Gee, I just learned that if you take a sheet of A3 and cut it in half, that's A4.

    If you take a D-size sheet of drafting paper,
    cut into halves, you have two sheets of C-size drafting paper
    cut into quarters, you have four sheets of B-size drafting paper, aka quarto
    cut into eight pieces, you have eight sheet of A-size, aka letter, aka octavo.

    The metric sizes preserve aspect ratio, the english sizes do not.

  6. Re:A complex way to point out simplity. by ZeLonewolf · · Score: 5, Informative

    No, but since you ask:

    The number is the measurement below the bust.

    an A-cup is a 1-inch difference between the measurement below the bust versus around the bust.
    B-cup is 2 inches, C-cup is 3 inches, etc.
    DD is the same as E, DDD is the same as EE which is the same as F. This holds valid through an H cup. After that, the interval is 2 inches, with the doubled letter being the in-between value.
    This, H-cup is 8", and I-cup is 10", and a 9" difference would be an HH-cup.

    The largest bra size manufactured without a special order is a size 60N.

    --
    "If at first you don't succeed, lower your standards."