P.S. And if the text where the number is found can be in any language, we must be able to account for the option which is set in COBOL by the phrase DECIMAL-POINT IS COMMA in the ENVIRONMENT DIVISION, and then if it can /actually/ be in any language we must account for natural integers using all of Greek (decimal without zero using lowercase alphabetic and two kinds of apostrophes), Hebrew (decimal without zero using Hebrew letters, and possibly with several letters for a higher hundred), Western Arabic-Indic, Eastern Arabic-Indic, Devanagari (and possibly other Brahmic) and CJK hanzi/kanji/hanja conventions. That would make it _really_ complicated. (Both Arabic-Indic and Brahmic including Devanagari write their natural integers like we do, only with different sets of ten digits.) (And I have knowingly skipped Roman numbers with or without the possibility to have an ending i written as j, Greek acrophonic aka Attic, Maya, Cuneiform and more. :-P )
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