I’m more curious where platforms 4 and 5 are.
Pretty sure you’ll have to ram a shopping cart into the wall to get there.
If i remember correctly, they are right next to the sign. 😉
How about 8 to 13?
This looks so familiar, but where is it? Dortmund Hbf?
Those signs are the same at all German train stations, and lots of cities have a nordstadt. Could be anywhere really.
I am from the area where this particular sign with the strange track distribution is located, but I just can’t put my finger on it. Dortmund, Essen, Cologne. Must be somewhere here because I’ve seen it so many times! And you’re right, “Zentrum” and “Nordstadt” are pretty generic, that’s why I cannot find it through online searches, I guess.
Is it real?
Yes but it’s not rational
Transcending comment
Good one
Yes, it’s real. In German decimal stop is . and not , so pi would be 3.14 and 3,14 means “three, fourteen”.
Wonderful.
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There’s no space after a comma in German mathematics. This really looks like it should.
Source: German as fuck.
In maths maybe not, but that’s not maths, it’s more like a sentence. There should be a space after comma.
there is clearly no space after the comma, and its written in german, so of course its using the german comma system