• @Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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      306 months ago

      Yeah, it’s nice an mysterious the first moment you hear about this but all the romance is gone once you think about how it works.

      • Kogasa
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        216 months ago

        By far the most complicated part is the fact that the ratio of successive terms in the Fibonacci sequence approaches a specific number (which happens to be the golden ratio, which happens to be close to the ratio of km/mi).

      • Lux
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        146 months ago

        You only have to memorize how the fibbonaci sequence works, which is just addind the previous 2 numbers together to get the next

        • @Stretch2m@lemm.ee
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          36 months ago

          But we only get one number to convert. We don’t know what the previous number is in the sequence without a chart up to that number.

          • akari
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            46 months ago

            you’re welcome

  • palordrolap
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    426 months ago

    Fun fact: If you have a scientific calculator (literal or app) but no other conversion tool available, the conversion factor between miles and kilometres is almost exactly ln 5. Disturbingly close in fact.

    That’s fewer keypresses than generating the Golden ratio or working out Fibonacci numbers. But if all you have is your head then, yeah, the Fibonacci trick is good enough in a pinch.

  • Spzi
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    286 months ago

    There are many such ways to memorize conversion ratios. Admittedly, this one is particularly cool, since you can construct it from the fairly trivial fibonacci series. But I still feel, it’s no replacement for the actual solution; get rid of imperial and adopt metric.