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    If you mean specifically about the spacing between the number, 40, and the units of measure, mm, then you are correct strictly speaking - there is a "Style Guide" for SI units:

    https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/2794/punctuation-with-units

    which recommends having a space between the 40 and the mm as so: 40 mm.

    If you mean "is it correct English" to say: "40 millimetres of water" - then yes, that's a generally correct syntax: for example in a cooking recipe, you might read something like "add 500 mg of butter" or "measure 100 ml of milk" etc.

    If you mean "is it correct to measure water amount (logically, a volume) using a single linear dimension": then yes, this is referring to water height as measured by a pluviometer (or Rain gauge in english language).

  • Custom User Avatar

    Are you sure "40mm of water" is correct form? I am not a native speaker, but 40mm water means "fourty-milimenter water" and 40 mm of water means "fourty milimeters of water." :-)

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    Exactly, it's super fast. In my work I do with CAN bus and DBCs and there's offsets and stuff, always in 2, 4, 8, 16... so this is the way :-)