Make your own using our Graph Builder or upload your own files, images or videos. All our charts are user-submitted.
« Previous Probability that an Attractive Girl is Single | Driving Speeds over a Lifetime Next »
Make your own using our Graph Builder or upload your own files, images or videos. All our charts are user-submitted.
« Previous Probability that an Attractive Girl is Single | Driving Speeds over a Lifetime Next »
1st
DIE
OMG! LMFAO!!!!!!!
This one doesn’t make sense!
Metric System Spell Check Fail
lol!
guess you didn’t consider that the person who made the graph is british
Still, the red underline is kind of obvious.
Either the user is British and using an American computer or the user is a pretentious American using British spelling for no reason. A British computer would know British spelling.
Mine has a button that switches between the two. So does your computer and i guess that the OP’s computer has a similar function.
And all Microsoft programs have automatic American English spell check.
you just don’t measure in meters, meters, meters, oh, I think I’ll use “half an inch” for the last measurement…so, measurement fail. Also, so must not be a brit.
(finishes reading the threads and eats crow)
NOM NOM NOM…
or Australian or New Zealand or practically anyplace apart from America
no, it’s that underline that offers you to convert meters to feet.
Unit consistency fail.
seconded.
motion passed!
thirdeded
fourthedededed????????????
Hmm, that means you can never answer the phone, seeing how it stops ringing in 100% of the cases when you’re about to grab it…
I’m a British user using a British computer, but there’s no way to get Pages to default to the British English dictionary for spell check. You can change it on a document by document basis, but not permanently. One of those fun “Apple knows best” moments. I was in a rush and not paying attention, so I didn’t notice it when I submitted it. Was immediately obvious as soon as I saw it posted, though
Way to show off your iWork
More like iFail
Also, people in England mix imperial and metric freely. We drive miles, but measure walkable distances usually in metres. We weigh food in kilos, but ourselves in stone, small distances are usually referred to in inches, really small ones in millimetres. We have no consistency in our units.
Wow, I think I could live there and be happy!
And since when did GraphJam care about actual reality as opposed to perceived reality?
You clearly don’t read the comments here very often.
Graphical double-fail for spelling and switching measurement systems.
And if you REALLY want to get pedantic, it’s a spelling checker. Unless you’re a magician, witch, or other magic-type person, you have no need for a spell checker.
As was stated previously: it’s a British author using a British colloquialism; we refer to the function as “Spell Check”.
So do we, 99.9% of the time. Spingor is just being, well, pedantic.
To be even more pedantic, this should really be a line graph.
Hey it’s not as bad as the last graph. Who uses a pie graph to illustrate probability? Srsly.
Makes sense to me. Probabilities should sum to 100%, so perfect for a pie chart.
actually, when describing different situations, probabilities do not sum to 100%
Only when describing one situation with multiple possible outcomes the odds sum up to a 100%
Yes, but that is the case in the last graph. A girl is either single, or she isn’t.
Oops, looking at the graph again I see I misread it. My bad.
What the hell is a meter?
It`s about 3 feet and it`s spelt metre