First floor - ground floor
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‎2007-09-09 08:31 AM
Thanks.

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‎2007-09-10 10:09 AM
Cheers,
Link.

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‎2007-09-10 06:32 PM
Link wrote:Of course.
No, but I don't see what all the fuss is about, it's just a number. The name is far more important IMHO.

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‎2007-09-11 01:27 AM
The Singapore way makes more sense. Is that how it is in the US?
John Hyland : ARINA : www.arina.biz
User ver 4 to 12 - Jumped to v22 - so many options and settings!!!
OSX 10.15.6 [Catalina] : Archicad 22 : 15" MacBook Pro 2019 [/size]
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‎2007-09-11 01:33 AM
Aussie wrote:
What confuses me more is in Singapore the Ground floor is called the 1st Storey whereas in Australia/England the level above the ground is the first storey.
The Singapore way makes more sense. Is that how it is in the US?

just a number . . .

~/ben
b f [a t ] p l a n b a r c h i t e c t u r e [d o t] n z
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‎2007-09-11 06:14 AM
~/archiben wrote:two storey house - top floor is 1st - not a lot of sense thereAussie wrote:
What confuses me more is in Singapore the Ground floor is called the 1st Storey whereas in Australia/England the level above the ground is the first storey.
The Singapore way makes more sense. Is that how it is in the US?it is . . . but i say the aussie/pommie way makes more sense: the first floor is the first 'floor' above ground . . .
just a number . . .![]()
~/ben

John Hyland : ARINA : www.arina.biz
User ver 4 to 12 - Jumped to v22 - so many options and settings!!!
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‎2007-09-11 02:24 PM
Aussie wrote:In the US ground floor = first floor.
Yeah I wouldnt be worried. What confuses me more is in Singapore the Ground floor is called the 1st Storey whereas in Australia/England the level above the ground is the first storey.
The Singapore way makes more sense. Is that how it is in the US?
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‎2007-09-12 10:08 AM
Even MS Outlook allows you to define the first day of the week and the way weeks are numbered throughout the year, which are also culturally defined.
Archicad28/Revit2024/Rhino8/Solibri/Zoom
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‎2007-09-13 12:44 AM
stefan wrote:absolutely. the template file should handle regional differences . . . and take all of that nasty localisation work away from graphisoft - freeing up their resources a bit. it would be far better to produce one application that taps into the operating system's languages rather than have to do it all themselves . . .
Why should that be hardcoded at all? It is a cultural difference, like so many other settings in the libraries. The software should be able to represent both.
~/ben
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‎2007-09-13 09:18 AM
~/archiben wrote:Precisely. They currently have to provide several language versions, while so many Open Source applications successfully have a single application, with support for as many languages as there are volunteers to translate.stefan wrote:absolutely. the template file should handle regional differences . . . and take all of that nasty localisation work away from graphisoft - freeing up their resources a bit. it would be far better to produce one application that taps into the operating system's languages rather than have to do it all themselves . . .
Why should that be hardcoded at all? It is a cultural difference, like so many other settings in the libraries. The software should be able to represent both.
~/ben
Everything that is bound to not be globally identical should not be hard-coded in the software, but configurable with external files (preferably easily locatable in the program's folders).
One version to rule them all?
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