This objection looks particularly stupid in light of the fact that current military grid references can be 10 digits and a GPS display gives you ~12 digits representing your position. Your coordinate system has to be precise enough for your applications, and if thats tiny in comparison to the overall scales you're working in then tough shit. Even in a local coordinate system you would need loads of figures more than is practical for a human to remember/use, so its all going to be stuffed into the computer anyway, so the number of digits you have is totally irrelevant. You cant just point at something and hope, you'll either die of starvation or old age long before reaching it.Batman wrote:So what kind of OTHER coordinate system would you be using if you were to have ships travel from one part of the galaxy to the other, preferably arriving in the system they were aiming at?Destructionator XIII wrote:The word is 'plane', not 'plain'.
Anyway:
What's the point of a galactic coordinate system? Why would you use it?
Supposing you are using it, how much time are you going to spend listing decimals? "He's at somewhere within a light year radius of galactic position 0, 0, 0.00004!" - The galaxy is so big, this system isn't likely to be precise enough to be terribly useful. It'll just be clunky to use.
The reinvention of the wheel here is pretty good as well. Cylindrical polar coordinates have been around for so many centuries!