A case label lists milliliters; the cooler question is "how many cans is that." A growler line says 473 mL and someone wants pint talk. Enter mL; read can counts and U.S. pint equivalents the page uses internally—quick cooler math before a party, not liquor law advice.
Wine glass math is different pour sizes—use the wine page for 750 mL bottles and glass counts.
355 mL expressed in standard cans matches a single can default—one—while bigger totals need a larger mL entry.
Cans, pints, and label milliliters
Mixing beer and wine on one shopping run still means two forms. 750 mL of wine in glasses answers a different glass size. Converting to liters for comparison? 355 milliliters in liters.
Road-trip fuel is unrelated but shows up the same weekend—fuel cost for a 240-mile trip.
- Can size follows the page's standard can volume.
- Pint equivalents are U.S. fluid measure habits—verify for your region.
- Planning only; drink responsibly.
Ordinary party shopping math, not serving-size regulation.