I only asked because, here in the US, welders tend to work in your hated fractions, while machinists work with decimals. Just wondering.
This got

tl;dr

, so
the short answer any welders in bigger firms use metric.
The long answer is:
I cannot answer from any authority, but after using metric for so long I presume welders here all use metric measures.
We have had landscaping type work with fences and quite a big retaining wall. Not a lot of welding, but the contractor did happen do a little welding himself, but would never have thought of using imperial measure, let alone fractions.
When we were using imperial measure, I used to get frustrated with the difficulty of procuring good decimal steel rulers.
Certainly, if outside workers like that all use metric by now, any engineering work would most certainly be metric, so no chance of feet and inches - fractions or decimal.
I can sort of understand USA and the UK sticking to imperial measures as the extent of changes involved in any changeover would be massive.
But don't get me started on the "conservatism" or the USA. Admittedly it's 45 years since I was there but even then, we could direct dial to the USA from here, but had to use an operator (or send a "cable") back to Australia.
Australia changed currency in 1966 (with mixed currency for a while) and weights and measures in 1971. The transition to metric weights and measures took a lot longer than the currency change.
Engineering and building materials are now of course entirely in metric and large engineering or building firm would have done everything in metric for decades.
But a lot of "handymen" (myself included, though
handy might be a stretch) still use some imperial (Whitworth of all things) nuts and bolts, just for compatibility with the things being repaired.
I imagine Chile, even though there was a fair bit of English influence earlier, has always used metric, following Spain.
Sorry, as usual my yes/no answer got to be another tl;dr.