Deportivo Seagull
I should coco
As an engineer constantly using abbreviations for milli and mega and giga and pica I would never hyphenate. By convention and too easily confused with negatives.
This.
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As an engineer constantly using abbreviations for milli and mega and giga and pica I would never hyphenate. By convention and too easily confused with negatives.
Sorry if I'm a bit late to this party.
My first and only port of call would be the IEEE.org.
I typed in 'hyphen between number and unit of measurement', and got this:
https://standards.ieee.org/content/dam/ieee-standards/standards/web/governance/revcom/scc14.pdf
Do a search on 'hyphen', and you will find the rules where it is referenced.
The bottom line is that hyphens are not allowed in normal circumstances. Your premise was quite correct. (I would have expected nothing less from you).
Although it's American I found this very clear and useful for dealing with SI units. https://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/checklist.html
No hyphens and a gap between number and unit.
The difficulty that HWT is having is that h (hour) is not an SI unit and so the same rules don't apply and it is possible that 12-h is the convention used to indicate 12 hours where technically 43,200 s could be used.
Life is too short, honestly.
Indeed.
500ml
12v
9hr
As an engineer constantly using abbreviations for milli and mega and giga and pica I would never hyphenate. By convention and too easily confused with negatives.
But not too short to add an unhelpful comment, of course.
Edit - and I can't see who gave you a thumbs up because I have both the plums on ignore. Fancy that!
Happy New Year, weirdo
Agree with the general 'bollocks to hyphens' opinions expressed here by others. I would also go with no space betwee the number and the abbreviation of the unit - space if using the full title though: e.g. 500ml; 6kg - but 500 millilitres; 6 kilograms.
Interestingly, we were always taught that an abbreviation should be followed by a full stop - e.g. £5 7s. 6d. - but that convention seems to have all but disappeared. Due to metrication? - I don't think the full stop was applied to the metric units we imported, and now no full stop seems to be the norm.
There are occasions where a phrase might be hyphenated - examples like, 'Corporal Jones with his 'they-don't-like-it-up-em' attitude', or 'Alex Dawson scored with one of his 'ball-and-goalie-all-in-the-back-of-the-net' specials'. They make sense, convey the meaning etc., but I don't think there's a definitative rule about when it's right or wrong to use it.
The capital 'O' in Use Of English is a definate no-no though! Happy New Year!
Thi’s. I’ve never u’sed or s’een hyphen’s attached to number’s. Maybe the publi’sher i’s one of tho’se people who in’si’st on u’sing apo’strophe’s every time they u’se the letter “s”?’
But not too short to add an unhelpful comment, of course.
Edit - and I can't see who gave you a thumbs up because I have both the plums on ignore. Fancy that!
Happy New Year, weirdo
I'll stick to being a 'weirdo' and not get worked up about such matters.
HNY 'H'.
Definitely no hyphens.
Put a space between the number and the units.
Units are not capitalised.
So 500 ml.
Which isn't nearly enough beer. Beer should be measured in pints anyway.
Thi’s. I’ve never u’sed or s’een hyphen’s attached to number’s. Maybe the publi’sher i’s one of tho’se people who in’si’st on u’sing apo’strophe’s every time they u’se the letter “s”?’
Agree with the general 'bollocks to hyphens' opinions expressed here by others. I would also go with no space betwee the number and the abbreviation of the unit - space if using the full title though: e.g. 500ml; 6kg - but 500 millilitres; 6 kilograms.
Interestingly, we were always taught that an abbreviation should be followed by a full stop - e.g. £5 7s. 6d. - but that convention seems to have all but disappeared. Due to metrication? - I don't think the full stop was applied to the metric units we imported, and now no full stop seems to be the norm.
There are occasions where a phrase might be hyphenated - examples like, 'Corporal Jones with his 'they-don't-like-it-up-em' attitude', or 'Alex Dawson scored with one of his 'ball-and-goalie-all-in-the-back-of-the-net' specials'. They make sense, convey the meaning etc., but I don't think there's a definitative rule about when it's right or wrong to use it.
The capital 'O' in Use Of English is a definate no-no though! Happy New Year!