Sybren Stuvel wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] enlightened us with: > > Of course, also support the locale variant where the meaning of "," > > and "." is swapped in most European countries. > > This is exactly why I wouldn't use that notation. What happens if it > is hardcoded into the source? I mean, that's what we're talking about. > Then the program would have to have an indication of which locale is > used for which source file. Without that, a program would be > interpreted in a different way on different computers. I think that > would be rather messy. > As mentioned in another post, we have that situation in all other places. Such as
mm/dd/yyyy vs dd/mm/yyyy decimal("10.23") - would european people expect decimal("10,23") to work ? 0xffff - a notation for base 16 why can't I have "E100.000,23" to mean "100,000.23" ? Nothing but notation. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list