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E.g. "2 kg/100kg" or "4 l/1000l". It's similar to a percentage, but can be for any scalar number, and is often the terminology used in industry, rather than percentages. E.g. in Agriculture - adding 4 liters of Roundup per 100 liters of tank mixture.
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Hi @olbrich, we've used a forked version of Ruby-units for a while now, and are trying to get back to master. This PR is my attempt at fixing one of the last divergent behaviours that we have working locally, but cannot get working on the latest master version of ruby-units. |
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@stwr667 Sorry, I've been a bit slow to respond. I will be updating the gem to make sure ruby support has been updated now that Ruby 3.0 has been released. Once I'm done with that I will be taking a look at any outstanding PRs. |
E.g. "2 kg/100kg" or "4 l/1000l".
It's similar to a percentage, but can be for any scalar number, and is often the terminology used in industry, rather than percentages. E.g. in Agriculture - adding 4 liters of Roundup per 100 liters of tank mixture.
Example unit definitions: