Yeah!
It seems strange that we can all happily use decimal points with money, but are too stupid to realise when some circuit designations don't make sense!
It's the same mentality which has ginormous lengths of timber sold in mm instead of metres.
As someone else already pointed out, it's not uncommon for component values, or current measurements, in a circuit to cover a huge range of values. A capacitor microphone preamp might easily include 10G ohm resistors and 100 ohm resistors. We use money for things that we've got, at first sight, a good grasp on the general price that they ought to have (a car, a loaf of bread, and so on), we'd spot a crazy value much faster than we might in an unfamiliar circuit.
My comment
was really pretty much "tongue in cheek"!
In my experience, the schematics which had been (horribly) photocopied were usually the ones that needed (& mostly used) the now preferred method, although with European stuff, it was often a "lucky dip" as to which system the original draughtsman used.
Strangely enough, it was almost always European gear that supplied cruddy schematics.
Australian, US, Japanese & British stuff usually supplied schematics ranging variously from excellent to reasonably good.
That said, there were notable exceptions------the workshop manual for one piece of TV test gear from a smallish UK company had the first couple of pages of schematics nicely & clearly done, but the last one, whilst it started OK at the left side, deteriorated into "chicken scratches" by the RHS.
It looked like the person doing the job left the company half way through the page, nobody else could understand the EEs original scribbly circuit, so they just reproduced that bit unclarified.
I used to love it, back in the day, when an EE would tack together a self supporting "spiderweb" of components, which would "work a treat".
The poor old Tech then had to make a permanent version on a PCB, which often had major problems with stray capacitance which were absent from the "spiderweb"!