A Python library to format, parse, and convert numbers from meters to maghi.
Since 2019, the metre has been defined as the length of the path travelled by light in vacuum during a time interval of 1/299792458 of a second, where the second is defined by a hyperfine transition frequency of caesium.
One second is the time that elapses during 9.192631770 x 10E9 cycles of the radiation produced by the transition between two levels of the cesium-133 atom.
What the hell is even that? How could you ever recreate a precise meter if you found yourself in a forest alone or shipwrecked on a desert island? Important questions. But the International System of Units doesn't care about you.
How do you define a Mago? Simple enough! That's his height:
Of course, you'll have already figured the advantages of such unit of measurement:
- Simple and immediate definition
- The size of a Niccolò is UNIVERSALLY known on Planet Earth
- This Niccolò has always existed and forever will
- Its length is unchanged since the dawn of time and is extremely stable (contrary to a standard meter) to:
- Thermal variations
- Mechanical fatigue
- Aging and degradation
- Chemical stress
- Verbal abuse
- Intense math classes (up to 8 hours of continued exposure)
- Electromagnetic radiation
- Ionizing radiation (under testing)
- If you dip a meter in Nutella it'll be ruined, a Mago will smile and thank you
- Conversion between meters and maghi is very straightforward
- A handy Python library is available to help migrate the world from metric to magic
- We denote a mago with the character: ℳ
- One ℳ equals approximately 1.93 meters
- All the standard multiples and submultiples apply:
Prefix Name Factor p pico 1e-12 n nano 1e-9 µ, u micro 1e-6 m milli 1e-3 c centi 1e-2 d deci 1e-1 1e0 da deca 1e1 h etto 1e2 k, K kilo 1e3 M mega 1e6 G giga 1e9 T tera 1e12
Ensure you have Python and Pip installed in your system and run:
pip install magolib
Alternatively, you can clone this repository, cd
into it, and run pip install .
First off, import magolib
:
from magolib import *
Next, you can perform all these operations:
>>> "34 meters equal %.2f maghi" % meters_to_maghi(34)
'34 meters equal 17.62 maghi'
>>> "One Niccolò is said to be %.2f meters tall" % maghi_to_meters(1)
'One Niccolò is said to be 1.93 meters tall'
>>> "If you cut a Niccolò in 56 pieces and take 3, you get %s" % format_maghi(3/56)
'If you cut a Niccolò in 56 pieces and take 3, you get 5.36 cℳ (centimaghi)'
>>> "274638 maghi equals %.2f kilomaghi" % convert_maghi(274638, '', 'k')
'274638 maghi equals 274.64 kilomaghi'
>>> "A giraffe hair can be as thick as %f meters" % parse_meters("350 um")
'A giraffe hair can be as thick as 0.000350 meters'
>>> "0.406 hℳ means %.2f maghi" % parse_maghi('0.406 hℳ')
'0.406 hℳ means 40.60 maghi'
# For simplicity, you can use an uppercase 'M' in place of the symbol 'ℳ
>>> "2.4e5 mM means %.2f maghi" % parse_maghi('2.4e5 mM')
'2.4e5 mM means 240.00 maghi'
>>> earth_circumference = parse_meters('40075.017 km')
>>> circ_in_maghi = meters_to_maghi(earth_circumference)
>>> "The Earth's circumference is %s" % format_maghi(circ_in_maghi)
"The Earth's circumference is 20.76 Mℳ (megamaghi)"