It does make sense. There are five units in total!
In fish keeping, only two units are used - german degrees, sometimes written as dH, and ppm (also called mg/l CaCO3). These are the units you will see in fish profiles.
Your german deg are 10.91, so call it 11. In ppm, that's 194.8 so call that 195ppm. Those numbers fall into the top end of moderately hard (using the scale from my water company)
In summary your water has:
pH 8.2
Hardness 11 german deg (dH)/195ppm; moderately hard.
These are the figures to use when looking at fish profiles.
One other thing to check - that pH of 8.2; was that freshly run tap water, tap water that has stood 24 hours or tank water? If it was freshly run tap water, can I suggest you leave a glass of water to stand overnight then test it. It will probably be different from freshly run, and is a more accurate pH. And your tank water has had some weird chemistry going on during cycling.
As for fish, you need to avoid those that must have soft acid water, and those which must have harder water than you have, though the latter only really applies to Rift Lake cichlids. The easiest way to proceed is to look in a few local shops and see what's available in your area and what you like. Write down the names, including the latin name if they give it. The come home and look on seriously fish. They give the water requirements and tank size of a lot more fish than in the fish profiles on here. Sometimes they give the hardness in ppm, sometimes in dH or oH, which is why I converted your hardness.