I'll give you all a totally different reason to have the control that beyoungjr is asking for... and it's a good reason.
I have a drawing (idw) which is an overall plan view of a large facility we modeled (400 FT X 655 FT), and this first drawing in the set is the birds eye view, which will be broken down into 4 partial plan views at a larger scale. But this first drawing view is set at a scale of 1/130 (or 0.007692) just to fit it on the sheet, which is 42" X 76".
I also have a Sketch Symbol I created in this drawing, which is just some additional linework brought in from an autocad drawing of the same facility, and this linework represents things such as roads, other geographic features, placeholders for future equipment (all things that are not actually modeled in 3D, so they won't show up on a drawing - but are important information nonetheless. So by importing this "secondary" information by way of making a sketch symbol with it, I can blend the two sets of information onto the idw. All I have to do is then set the scale of the Sketch Symbol to the decimal equivalent of 1/130 drawing view scale (which again, would be 0.007692). When I edit the sketch symbol, enter the scale .007692, it rounds it to .008. You may say, ok so what't the big deal? Well the big deal is now the geometry from my model does not match up exactly with the geometry i imported into the sketch symbol to use as an overlay! Now if I decide to apply an ordinate dimension, I better be careful which line I pick. Of course I understand that when the dimension is rounded, it amounts to no consequence, but technically speaking, my sketch symbol cannot be scaled to match exactly the scale of my idw view, and that's annoying as hell, because most of us are trained properly to be precise - as a designer of 30 years, it's just in our nature - and not having control over this is just annoying.