this post was submitted on 09 Dec 2023
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Computer History aka Tech Time Travelers
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Who the heck writes cents as a fraction?
In the US its always been the standard as far as I'm aware. I think its so its impossible to confuse cents for the dollar amount if you have poor handwriting. For example mistaking the value of this check as $401 instead of $4.01
I was taught, and every check I've ever seen before this one has followed what I was taught, to write the amount normally in the top right box, and as a fraction on the bottom where you write out the full amount. This is the first time I've seen fractions used in both boxes.
Every person who has ever written a check ever. I haven't written a check in many years though, so I can understand how you aren't familiar
In the USA maybe
It's been a long time since I've written a cheque, but it was always decimals in the UK
I wonder how you guys wrote checks before the decimalization.
I guess we probably used the old English currency notation, like 10/6d and £1/3/2, but that was long before I was writing cheques.
Interesting thing with the long form part, we would always do "one hundred and forty five pounds twenty two pence only" the only being used as the sort of end marker to mitigate changes
I've seen a lot of checks in my life, and I've only seen the fraction used in the full written out line on the bottom, never in the top right box.
It's common on the fully written line but I've never seen it on the numeric line. He was a weird one.
Exactly.
As an American, it would be weird for me to see it as a decimal, however I can't say I've ever really thought about it. It's just "traditional" for checks to be written that way here, and how we're taught in school.
Also American and I've always used decimal in the numerical box and the fraction in the spelled out line.
…who the heck pays forty thousand bucks for a check
exactly my reaction... as an european, that is strange way of writing 4.01.
Who the heck pays for a worthless signature?