Hi :)
I like the look of their "Acknowledgements" page.  It lists individuals as
well as companies.
http://cldr.unicode.org/index/acknowledgments

OpenOffice is listed along with many OpenSource projects in the "who uses"
section
http://cldr.unicode.org/#TOC-Who-uses-CLDR-

So i wonder if there is a good reason why LibreOffice didn't use it because
at first glance it looks fairly fantastic to me.  Is there some politics or
licensing that makes it difficult for LibreOffice to be involved or was it
just not as useful as it's looks at first glance or some other good reason
for not being involved?


Getting back to the initial question, would it be difficult to list the
languages each in their own language?
Regards from
Tom :)




On 10 April 2014 18:17, Xuacu <xuacu...@gmail.com> wrote:

> 2014-04-10 17:43 GMT+02:00 Kevin Suo <suokunl...@gmail.com>:
>
> >[...]
> > I even dont know most of the others "AN AR AST BE BG BN BRX CA CA-VAL
> > [...]
> These are ISO 639-1/ISO 639-2 language codes. In case you need it,
> their equivalences are here:
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ISO_639-2_codes
>
> BTW, can't we use CLDR libraries to get language names in local and/or
> foreign format as needed? I'm not a developer, that's just a blind
> guess.
>
> Best regards.
> --
> Xuacu Saturio
>

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