Can somebody explain to me how to use Celsius, or at least convert it to Fahrenheit.
How to convert it?
use google trust me google's better than all of us.
Celsius is just the melting temperature 0°C to 100°C boiling temperature of water
ESC-->Options-->Left side of screen, should say Celsius--> Click, swap to Kelvin (hilariously easy to convert) or Fahrenheit.
Quote from: Fruit loops on December 20, 2014, 02:06:54 PM
Can somebody explain to me how to use Celsius, or at least convert it to Fahrenheit.
First, find a brick wall.
Bash your head against it a few times. Repeat until you have eliminated all vestiges of that foul imperial system from your brain.
Attend an elementary school anywhere in the world except the USA, Liberia or Myanmar. (yes really, that is the company the foot and inch keeps)
Congratulations! You are now able to use a system of measurements based on absolute values based on physics that are all easily and beautifully interchangable.
1 liter of water is 0.1x0.1x0.1 meters and weighs 1000 gram. Any 8 year old child can do this, but half of American highschoolers probably can't do this in the imperial system without a calculator.
Or you can use Kelvin, where 0K is absolute zero (no subatomic particles can move) and 273K is boiling... other then that its identical to celcius; so doesnt really help i guess haha (you just convert by Kelvin - 273 = Celcius, or Celcius + 273 = Kelvin)
Does anyone know like conversion site or something?
Try googling "32F = C"
Quote from: Snownova on December 21, 2014, 11:56:52 AM
Quote from: Fruit loops on December 20, 2014, 02:06:54 PM
Can somebody explain to me how to use Celsius, or at least convert it to Fahrenheit.
First, find a brick wall.
Bash your head against it a few times. Repeat until you have eliminated all vestiges of that foul imperial system from your brain.
Attend an elementary school anywhere in the world except the USA, Liberia or Myanmar. (yes really, that is the company the foot and inch keeps)
Congratulations! You are now able to use a system of measurements based on absolute values based on physics that are all easily and beautifully interchangable.
1 liter of water is 0.1x0.1x0.1 meters and weighs 1000 gram. Any 8 year old child can do this, but half of American highschoolers probably can't do this in the imperial system without a calculator.
It's not like Europe created the system we currently use or anything, after all.
Quote from: iame6162013 on December 20, 2014, 02:23:40 PM
Celsius is just the melting temperature 0�C to 100�C boiling temperature of water
What do you mean? i don't get it.........
Quote from: JonoRig on December 22, 2014, 07:35:13 PM
Or you can use Kelvin, where 0K is absolute zero (no subatomic particles can move) and 273K is boiling... other then that its identical to celcius; so doesnt really help i guess haha (you just convert by Kelvin - 273 = Celcius, or Celcius + 273 = Kelvin)
thats not right at all. -273 C is 0 K. 0 C is 273 K. and boiling point of water is 384 K.
Oops, I meant 273 is freezing
Technically it's 273.15/6, but that's a fiddly number
Quote from: Snownova on December 21, 2014, 11:56:52 AM
Quote from: Fruit loops on December 20, 2014, 02:06:54 PM
Can somebody explain to me how to use Celsius, or at least convert it to Fahrenheit.
First, find a brick wall.
Bash your head against it a few times. Repeat until you have eliminated all vestiges of that foul imperial system from your brain.
Attend an elementary school anywhere in the world except the USA, Liberia or Myanmar. (yes really, that is the company the foot and inch keeps)
Congratulations! You are now able to use a system of measurements based on absolute values based on physics that are all easily and beautifully interchangable.
1 liter of water is 0.1x0.1x0.1 meters and weighs 1000 gram. Any 8 year old child can do this, but half of American highschoolers probably can't do this in the imperial system without a calculator.
that is a good one :D :D :D
Quote from: Evelyn on December 23, 2014, 01:35:48 AM
It's not like Europe created the system we currently use or anything, after all.
well you don't need to invent a bicycle, just take it and use it.
Quote from: Snownova on December 21, 2014, 11:56:52 AM
First, find a brick wall.
Bash your head against it a few times. Repeat until you have eliminated all vestiges of that foul imperial system from your brain.
Attend an elementary school anywhere in the world except the USA, Liberia or Myanmar. (yes really, that is the company the foot and inch keeps)
Congratulations! You are now able to use a system of measurements based on absolute values based on physics that are all easily and beautifully interchangable.
1 liter of water is 0.1x0.1x0.1 meters and weighs 1000 gram. Any 8 year old child can do this, but half of American highschoolers probably can't do this in the imperial system without a calculator.
You won the thread Snownova. :)
Quote from: Halinder on December 20, 2014, 04:09:23 PM
ESC-->Options-->Left side of screen, should say Celsius--> Click, swap to Kelvin (hilariously easy to convert) or Fahrenheit.
just to throw this back in there in case it was missed, since I believe this will help him with the issue.
I feel so stupid xP
Where is ESC?
Quote from: Fruit loops on December 23, 2014, 08:53:24 PM
I feel so stupid xP
Where is ESC?
(http://cl.jroo.me/z3/i/S/F/d/a.aaa-There-is-no-Escape.jpg)
I know the ESC button on the keyboard, but where is it on google?
You... you can't be serious? I hope this is just the most elaborate trolling I've seen on this site so far...
Here it is https://www.google.com/search?q=escape+button (https://www.google.com/search?q=escape+button)
:D
Quote from: Halinder on December 20, 2014, 04:09:23 PM
ESC-->Options-->Left side of screen, should say Celsius--> Click, swap to Kelvin (hilariously easy to convert) or Fahrenheit.
This is referring to RimWorld. It's how to change away from Celsius in-game.
... i have already done that...
I want to learn how to use Celsius... ;-;
i already changed it inside rimworld i just want to know how to convert F to C in real life.
I guess i should have worded it better... lol.
To convert Fahrenheit to Celsius, take the number, subtract 32, multiply by 5, then divide by 9.
Do the inverse to convert Celsius to Fahrenheit. Water freezes at 0 celsius, and boils at 100 celsius (provided atmospheric pressure is equal to 1 atm)
Quote from: Fruit loops on December 23, 2014, 08:53:24 PM
I feel so stupid xP
Where is ESC?
on the corner of your keyboard
Quote from: Evelyn on December 24, 2014, 01:06:27 AM
To convert Fahrenheit to Celsius, take the number, subtract 32, multiply by 5, then divide by 9.
Do the inverse to convert Celsius to Fahrenheit. Water freezes at 0 celsius, and boils at 100 celsius (provided atmospheric pressure is equal to 1 atm)
"inverse" is meant here "in inversed order" as well: multiply by 9, divide by 5, add 32
I have no idea what book this is from, but it's just too perfect
(http://i.imgur.com/iDOzAa5.jpg)
Quote from: Snownova on January 14, 2015, 05:14:45 AM
I have no idea what book this is from, but it's just too perfect
(http://i.imgur.com/iDOzAa5.jpg)
Agreed, Also, apparently the book is "Wild Thing" by Josh Bazell
(Praise the power of Google!)
Turn down the tone a bitt.
Celsius work simply like this:
At +21c the template of a room is quite nice. 21c is 69.8f
At -0c the water starts to freeze. -0c is 32f
At +100c water starts to boil and will devolve in to steam. 100c is 212f
So simply from 0c to 15c can be classed as cold weather. while 20 and up is warm
The freezer template is -0c and downwards. You will start to get ice when the template is at -0c
I don't know why this was bumped. The question was answered literally last year.
lol that is true.