Why don't compasses have just two Cardinal directions (North, East, -North, -East)?
from colourlesspony@pawb.social to nostupidquestions@lemmy.world on 06 Dec 22:50
https://pawb.social/post/36007909

Do we really need West and South when we can use negative North and negative East?

#nostupidquestions

threaded - newest

EndOfLine@lemmy.world on 06 Dec 22:53 next collapse

Just guessing here, but I would think it’s for for clarity and brevity. West and South are shorter to say and distinct enough to avoid being easily misheard causing somebody to go in the opposite direction than intended.

markz@suppo.fi on 06 Dec 23:06 next collapse

Left and Minusleft

colourlesspony@pawb.social on 06 Dec 23:24 next collapse

Exactly, we don’t need to be right at all.

667@lemmy.radio on 06 Dec 23:34 collapse

Clockwise and anticounterclockwise

Hackworth@piefed.ca on 06 Dec 23:37 collapse

Double plus ungood

driving_crooner@lemmy.eco.br on 07 Dec 01:24 next collapse

Plus and minusplus

Tujio@lemmy.world on 07 Dec 02:54 collapse

I dunno. That seems double plus ungood to me.

litchralee@sh.itjust.works on 06 Dec 23:12 next collapse

As a practical matter, relative directions are already hard enough, where I might say that Colorado is east of California, and California is west of Colorado.

To use +/- East would mean there’s now just a single symbol difference between relative directions. California bring -East of Folorado, and Colorado being +East of California.

Also, we need not forget that the conventional meridian used for Earth navigation is centered on Greenwich in the UK, and is a holdover from the colonial era where Europe is put front-and-center on a map and everything else is “free real estate”. Perhaps if the New World didn’t exist, we would have right-ascension based system where Greenwich is still 0-deg East and Asia is almost 160-deg East. Why would colonialists center the maps on anywhere but themselves?

over_clox@lemmy.world on 06 Dec 23:20 collapse

Ah yes, our great 51st state, Folorado!

litchralee@sh.itjust.works on 06 Dec 23:46 next collapse

I see my typo, and it’s too funny and I’m just going to roll with it haha

over_clox@lemmy.world on 07 Dec 01:28 collapse

Fine choice my friend, I’d leave it too haha! 😂

palordrolap@fedia.io on 06 Dec 23:46 collapse

Right next to Clorida.

over_clox@lemmy.world on 07 Dec 01:48 collapse

But is that Wast or Eest of the Missipissi River?

calamityjanitor@lemmy.world on 06 Dec 23:15 next collapse

I think the idea of directions came before the idea of negative.

warbond@lemmy.world on 07 Dec 05:38 collapse

Walking backward is just walking negatively forward by another name

hperrin@lemmy.ca on 06 Dec 23:19 next collapse

Better question is why don’t they have 8? I hate saying “north by north east”.

Hegar@fedia.io on 06 Dec 23:54 next collapse

You gotta say "nor-nor-east" instead, that's a blast.

karashta@piefed.social on 07 Dec 10:40 collapse

Northeast would be one of the 8 already. North by northeast is the direction between north and northeast

hperrin@lemmy.ca on 07 Dec 16:39 collapse

I understand that. If we had a word for north east, let’s say “yest”, then I wouldn’t have to say “north by north east”, I could just say “north yest”.

Nora@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 06 Dec 23:27 next collapse

Why stop at two, when you could stop at just one?

North

Negative North = south

Negative 90 North = west

90 North =east

colourlesspony@pawb.social on 06 Dec 23:29 next collapse

Yes! Now we are getting somewhere.

PM_ME_VINTAGE_30S@lemmy.sdf.org on 06 Dec 23:33 next collapse

Why stop at one when you could stop at just zero and not use a compass?

This reply was brought to you by The Lost MC.

queerlilhayseed@piefed.blahaj.zone on 07 Dec 00:08 collapse

In emergencies when you need to use a compass you can save time by using these maximally efficient cardinal names: , , , and .

sznowicki@lemmy.world on 06 Dec 23:38 next collapse

Better idea! What if we use 0 for North and then divide the circle around by exactly 360 points? That way we don’t need NSEW, we have 0, 90, 180, 270!

SendMePhotos@lemmy.world on 06 Dec 23:48 collapse

Ah… I love airplanes… To be clear, the issue with this is that magnetic 0 is not the same as true 0. There’s a slight offset that can cause issues. So why not have like… True 0 and magnetic 0. T0 and m0?

adespoton@lemmy.ca on 06 Dec 23:58 next collapse

Why not?

Because what happens when your referent changes? Which direction is Mars from Earth? We obviously need a single navigational system that works anywhere in the universe.

guy@piefed.social on 07 Dec 02:34 next collapse

Mars would be that way I assume

adespoton@lemmy.ca on 07 Dec 03:05 collapse

Plus or minus?

SpikesOtherDog@ani.social on 07 Dec 03:07 collapse

Easy! Assuming the earth is the center of the universe, coordinates are 360,360

± the current position of the Earth in the solar system ± the current position of the solar system in the Milky Way. In the Local Cluster, in the Local Group, in the Virgo Supercluster, in the Local Mesh

In order to return, we just go that way: <img alt="" src="https://ani.social/pictrs/image/2d2c988b-1df8-4ac6-8d63-8d557b7c0e61.gif">

LastYearsIrritant@sopuli.xyz on 07 Dec 11:46 collapse

There is no center of the universe.

SpikesOtherDog@ani.social on 07 Dec 13:27 collapse

Huh, guess you are right

chillpanzee@lemmy.ml on 07 Dec 05:00 collapse

Fun fact… there is an ICAO effort to “get rid” of magnetic headings for runway numbers. I listened to a presentation they did last year, and as much as I went into it thinking it wasn’t needed, I was a convert listening to them.

Btw, magnetic variation is pretty significant in some places. It’s 13 degrees where I am.

SendMePhotos@lemmy.world on 07 Dec 06:14 collapse

What’s the new one? I must have missed the presentation. Probably because I wasn’t invited.

chillpanzee@lemmy.ml on 07 Dec 07:52 collapse

I don’t remember where I watched the presentation. I think it might have been one of Brian Schiff’s videos, but I don’t remember. Here’s a link to it I found online. www2023.icao.int/safety/OPS/…/Truenorth.aspx

SendMePhotos@lemmy.world on 07 Dec 08:06 collapse

I suppose it makes sense but it feels wrong. I’m so used to having and using magnetic but that isn’t a reason to continue doing less efficient things.

The redundancy aspect is there as when systems would fail (GPS for true), the magnetic redundancy would still come into okay and still work enough to get by.

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/ace5c259-6520-4283-9a68-6547e0aec34f.gif">

AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world on 06 Dec 23:57 collapse

We could use one, and assume we’re operating in the field of complex numbers:

1 N = North
i N = West
i^2^ N = South
i^3^ N = East.

And we could use the complex modulus to indicate distance or speed… or we could map the Riemann sphere onto the surface of the earth and use a single complex number to indicate location.

Agility0971@lemmy.world on 07 Dec 12:22 next collapse

Directions from maps: turn pi at the nearest i intersection

Trigger2_2000@sh.itjust.works on 08 Dec 02:59 collapse

Now you’re talking!

MotoAsh@piefed.social on 06 Dec 23:45 next collapse

In addition to what others have already said, it’d be really silly to make one a negative of the other in the most basic sense, too.

There have been so many issues with electrons having a “negative” charge, and that’s a binary situation! It would be so much worse to introduce implied favoritism with basic directions.

Pamasich@kbin.earth on 06 Dec 23:38 next collapse

Why even use WORDS for it? That's too long.

Let's use ternary numbers, one for each of North-South and East-West. A 1 is center, 2 is north/east, and 0 is south/west.

So North is now 21. South east is 02.

Much easier to say like that, and it covers all 8 directions too and the center (11) too.

MumboJumbo@lemmy.world on 06 Dec 23:56 next collapse

Other languages kinda do. In Spanish, east and west are este and oeste. Italian is est and ovest.

Veedem@lemmy.world on 07 Dec 00:01 next collapse

What goes up, must come negative-Up

whaleross@lemmy.world on 07 Dec 00:20 collapse

One step forward and two steps un-forward.

Hegar@fedia.io on 07 Dec 00:09 next collapse

North and south are fundementally different, climate and biosphere -wise, so i don't think it would ever make sense to people to modify the same word to describe two very different things. East and west maybe less so, but dawn and dusk are pretty important differences.

Some polynesian cultures use two main direction words, which usually translate as something like mountain-ward and beach-ward.

_NetNomad@fedia.io on 07 Dec 00:15 next collapse

east and eastn't

popekingjoe@lemmy.world on 07 Dec 02:31 collapse

East and weast.

Blackfeathr@lemmy.world on 07 Dec 02:36 collapse

Dammit Patrick…

SeductiveTortoise@piefed.social on 07 Dec 00:44 next collapse

180° of Arctica and then 180°of Antarctica. Reasonable.

Klear@quokk.au on 07 Dec 00:57 next collapse

Whatever, Nancy.

zaphod@sopuli.xyz on 07 Dec 01:45 next collapse

And I say we don’t have enough names, we should have names for at least 30° and 45° increments.

4am@lemmy.zip on 07 Dec 03:23 next collapse

We do, they’re just combinations of the 90 degree ones.

Southwest. North-Northeast.

Theatomictruth@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 Dec 07:02 collapse

Yeah, there are 32 named points on a compass, one every 11.25 degrees, you can even fractionalize it to get even more granular

Southwest by west half west for example is 242 degrees

leftzero@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 Dec 12:43 collapse

Most Mediterranean cultures used to have names for at least eight winds, each at 45 degrees from each other. Greeks (and therefore Romans) used twelve, at 30 degrees.

Here’s a classic navigator’s wind rose, for instance, with 32 different directions based on eight named winds (might be a bit hard to read on dark backgrounds, here’s the original SVG):

<img alt="" src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/db/32-point_compass_%28traditional_winds%29.svg/1393px-32-point_compass_%28traditional_winds%29.svg.png">

Hoohoo@fedia.io on 07 Dec 02:06 next collapse

This is basic coordinate usage. Negative latitudes are South. And 180 or -180 is half a planet away from the prime meridien. West of England are negative longitudes.

Lladra@lemmy.world on 07 Dec 02:43 next collapse

Why don’t clocks have just 4 numbers?

Buffalox@lemmy.world on 07 Dec 03:13 collapse

False equivalence.

Zwuzelmaus@feddit.org on 07 Dec 04:53 next collapse

Do we really need West and South when we can use negative North and negative East?

Yes of course.

Otherwise I couldn’t say anymore: “I am looking North and my butt is looking South”.

And how would you even pronounce south-Southwest then? Impossible unless you are quite drunk!

/s

1rre@discuss.tchncs.de on 07 Dec 08:44 collapse

anti-north-northeast doesn’t sound unreasonable, but that’s being logical instead of just thinking about two directions, as written in text, as OP is

Zwuzelmaus@feddit.org on 07 Dec 17:17 collapse

Try all the 16 possibilities and then see how many “antis” you really need there.

1rre@discuss.tchncs.de on 07 Dec 18:14 collapse

In all cases, 2 at most.

North
North-north-east
North-east
North-east-east
East
Anti-north-east-east
Anti-north-east
Anti-north-north-east (south-north-east is impossible so the second anti would be redundant)
Anti-north
Anti-east-anti-north-north (reversed word order to distinguish it further)
Anti-east-anti-north
Anti-east-east-anti-north
Anti-east
Anti-east-east-north
Anti-east-north
Anti-east-north-north

Zwuzelmaus@feddit.org on 08 Dec 04:15 collapse

Anti-north-north-east (south-north-east is impossible so the second anti would be redundant)

These extra complications make it even more unusable that the anti thing itself LOL

1rre@discuss.tchncs.de on 08 Dec 11:56 collapse

I was assuming a conlang situation where “north” referred more to the axis, rather than the direction.

Anti-north-north would be more “reversed-vertical-vertical” meaning it’s reversed vertical (south), and closer to the vertical axis than the horizontal axis. North would just be “vertical” without being reversed.

Zwuzelmaus@feddit.org on 08 Dec 12:51 collapse

I don’t know what you are even talking about (and too lazy to put it into a translator now).

But I know that North and South are terms that must be usable for everybody. So, especially for such people who don’t know what you are even talking about.

1rre@discuss.tchncs.de on 08 Dec 13:47 collapse

Essentially: it’s not designed as a change from North/East/South/West, it’s designed as a from-scratch way to refer to those directions.

The sun rises in the East and sets in the West, so let’s say East is “Sun” and West is “Setting-Sun.”

Polaris/The North Star is in the North, so let’s call that direction “Star” and the other direction “No-Star.”

When you say “Setting-Sun-Sun-Star,” you’re saying the direction is more similar to the path the sun takes through the sky than it is to the North Star, and in the direction the sun sets.

16 directions is pretty arbitrary anyway though, usually 8 is enough and then you don’t have the confusion of repeated words.

SolidShake@lemmy.world on 07 Dec 05:17 next collapse

Negative north negative east airlines doesn’t have a good ring to it though.

A_norny_mousse@feddit.org on 07 Dec 09:35 collapse

How about 225° airlines?

chillpanzee@lemmy.ml on 09 Dec 00:55 collapse

You probably already know this, but for others’ amusement… Southwest’s Pilot Training pathway program is called Destination 225, and I doub’t that many prople even in the airline business get the reference. So if nothing else, they’ve got a branding headstart.

A_norny_mousse@feddit.org on 09 Dec 07:38 collapse

I didn’t! Had to look up online compass that had degrees on it.

But it doesn’t surprise me that any company’s PR guys would come up with things like that.

chillpanzee@lemmy.ml on 10 Dec 07:10 collapse

An even funner Southwest PR story is the Malice in Dallas. I don’t have a good resource to point you to, but you can google it. it was an armwrestling match between CEOs to settle a corporate dispute. The two companies holstered their lawyers and settled the grudge with a big PR event.

UnspecificGravity@piefed.social on 07 Dec 06:32 next collapse

How would that be any easier?

DeathByBigSad@sh.itjust.works on 07 Dec 07:34 next collapse

@NorthWestWind@lemmy.world

Your new username is -South -East Wind lmao

A_norny_mousse@feddit.org on 07 Dec 07:59 next collapse

Why do we have 2 separate words for good and bad? Good and ungood are totally sufficient.

(reference)

dbx12@programming.dev on 07 Dec 09:17 next collapse

Spin it further and get rid of “great” and “outstanding”. I suggest using plus good and double plus good.

A_norny_mousse@feddit.org on 07 Dec 09:22 collapse
Infrapink@thebrainbin.org on 07 Dec 09:59 next collapse

That's actually how it works in Irish. The word for good is deas, while the word for bad is deas prefixed with the negating particle , so mídheas.

(There are still separate words for tge cardinal directions).

KSPAtlas@sopuli.xyz on 07 Dec 23:48 collapse

Is it? I tried checking in a dictionary but it didn’t list mídheas as a word and “deas” was defined as right/nice/honest, not just “good”

PlexSheep@infosec.pub on 07 Dec 12:43 collapse

The complement of good, u good, I cludes things that are neither good not bad (neutral)

mech@feddit.org on 07 Dec 08:25 next collapse

“negative Eastern countries” has a nice ring to it.

fizzle@quokk.au on 07 Dec 09:03 next collapse

For most of human history people who couldn’t do math, or read, or understand a map, have been communicating directions to each other.

4 directions is just enough to tell someone which way to face, without being too many to remember.

leftzero@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 Dec 12:30 collapse

without being too many to remember

People used to have no problem remembering the names of at least eight winds, depending on the direction…

Here are the ones used in Catalonia, for instance; we were taught them at school:

<img alt="" src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8e/Rosa_dels_vents.png">

Though, to be fair, llevant means where the sun rises and ponent where it sets, migjorn means midday, which makes sense given the other two, and everyone already knew tramuntana, cause it’s a headache when it blows, so it’s mostly the other four we have to remember… the Greek one seems quite harder, though, then again, I’m not Greek…:

<img alt="" src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/38/Roman_12-wind_rose.svg/1448px-Roman_12-wind_rose.svg.png">

DoomProphet@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 Dec 12:43 next collapse

We just say “North-East” for gregal or “North, North-East” if it’s half between North and gregal. Other would be North-West, South-West, and South-East.

leftzero@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 Dec 12:45 next collapse

Sure, but that’s usually much less poetic, North by Northwest notwithstanding.

funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works on 08 Dec 01:20 collapse

We used to say Boreas, Auster, Zephyr and Eurus

fizzle@quokk.au on 08 Dec 04:29 collapse

Sure, but 4 is easier to remember?

droning_in_my_ears@lemmy.world on 07 Dec 10:07 next collapse

Why do we have 26 letters? Why not just communicate in binary!

01010100 01101000 01101001 01110011 00100000 01101001 01110011 00100000 01110110 01100101 01110010 01111001 00100000 01101110 01100001 01110100 01110101 01110010 01100001 01101100 00100001

DeathByBigSad@sh.itjust.works on 07 Dec 22:45 next collapse

On the other hand, 8000+ characters seems kinda fun…

握草泥马币


hint

The joke is “wo cao ni ma bi”, change the tones and you got 我操你妈逼 🤭

funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works on 08 Dec 01:13 collapse

oh you salty dog you

…(🤷‍♂️)

mlg@lemmy.world on 08 Dec 04:41 next collapse

55 73 65 20 68 65 78 20 66 6f 72 20 74 65 72 73 65 6e 65 73 73 20 62 72 75 68 0a 0a 41 6c 73 6f 20 74 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 73 74 69 6c 6c 20 61 73 73 75 6d 69 6e 67 20 55 54 46 2d 38 20 6f 72 20 61 74 20 6c 65 61 73 74 20 41 53 43 49 49 2c 20 73 6f 20 77 74 68 20 6c 6d 61 6f

Hupf@feddit.org on 08 Dec 09:31 collapse
leftzero@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 Dec 12:20 next collapse

If the four cardinal points bother you, better not look up wind roses or rhumbline networks

<img alt="A rather simple one. " src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d2/Compass_rose_from_Catalan_Atlas_%281375%29.jpg">

thatradomguy@lemmy.world on 07 Dec 13:12 collapse

Mind officially blown. 🤯

EponymousBosh@awful.systems on 07 Dec 15:30 next collapse

This is just the Minecraft coordinates system and it sucks. “OK I’m at the coords, where’s the–oh fuck, it was -3002, 108 not 3002, 108.”

Hadriscus@jlai.lu on 07 Dec 17:50 next collapse

I would not be surprised compasses were invented before negative numbers

edit

negative numbers : 200 BCE
compasses : as early as 202 BCE

(these are just from a cursory search, I am not a specialist)

vala@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 08 Dec 01:31 next collapse

Why do we have subtraction when we can just add a negative number?

Holytimes@sh.itjust.works on 11 Dec 09:43 collapse

Isn’t that exactly how computers work?

Rhoeri@lemmy.world on 08 Dec 01:37 next collapse

Why do we have down when we can just use negative up?

EndlessNightmare@reddthat.com on 08 Dec 09:04 collapse

So you’d have states like North Dakota and Negative North Dakota?

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 10 Dec 13:57 collapse

The Negative shall rise again!