aue.txt
-------
$Id: aue.txt,v 1.1 2000/03/15 18:29:52 ap1jjg Exp $
Some correspondance on alt.usage.english. I am curious as to
what you should call the decimal point in a number qua symbol.
The correspondance was inconclusive, and I decided to use
"decimal symbol" and "group symbol" after all.
---------------------------------------------------------------
Punctuation of numbers
Hello all
I need to refer to the punctation used in numbers, eg.,
3.141,592,653
in a language-independant fashion. Specifically to
* the "decimal separator" ("." or centered dot in English, "," in French)
* the "digit-triple separator" ("," in English, "." in French)
Would anyone have any suggestions or references?
Thanks
-j
--
J.J.Green, Dept. Applied Math. University of Sheffield, UK
http://www.arbs.demon.co.uk
From: "Frank Peelo" <fpeelo@indigo.ie>
Subject: Re: Punctuation of numbers
Newsgroups: alt.usage.english
Date: Tue, 14 Mar 2000 14:19:26 -0000
Xref: news.shef.ac.uk alt.usage.english:415923
john green <ap1jjg@gold.cics.shef.ac.uk> wrote in message
news:s8xpusxbud1.fsf@gold.cics.shef.ac.uk...
> Hello all
>
> I need to refer to the punctation used in numbers, eg.,
>
> 3.141,592,653
>
> in a language-independant fashion. Specifically to
> * the "decimal separator" ("." or centered dot in English, "," in French)
> * the "digit-triple separator" ("," in English, "." in French)
Do all languages group digits in threes? Windows, at least, allows you to
specify the number of digits in a group, which suggests that some regions
use different groupings.
FP
From: brahms@mindspring.com (Stan Brown)
Subject: Re: Punctuation of numbers
Newsgroups: alt.usage.english
Date: Tue, 14 Mar 2000 15:46:36 -0500
Organization: Oak Road Systems
Xref: news.shef.ac.uk alt.usage.english:416044
Said ap1jjg@gold.cics.shef.ac.uk (john green) in
alt.usage.english:
>Hello all
>
>I need to refer to the punctation used in numbers, eg.,
>
> 3.141,592,653
>
>in a language-independant fashion. Specifically to
>* the "decimal separator" ("." or centered dot in English, "," in French)
>* the "digit-triple separator" ("," in English, "." in French)
First, I don't know of any widespread style that puts commas
*after* the decimal point.
Second, in 234,123.33 the comma is a "thousands separator", in my
vocabulary anyway. ISO Handbook 1, /Units of Measurement/, calls
the separator between the whole and fractional parts a "decimal
sign". Microsloth Windows calls them "digit grouping symbol" and
"decimal symbol".
The preferred decimal sign is the comma, and the preferred
thousands separator is a thin space. The American way is a period
and a comma, respectively.
--
Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Cleveland, Ohio, USA
http://www.mindspring.com/~brahms/
alt.usage.English intro and FAQs: http://go.to/aue
WWWebster online dictionary: http://www.m-w.com/mw/netdict.htm
more FAQs: http://www.mindspring.com/~brahms/faqget.htm
From: "Bruce McIntyre" <mcbruce1@home.nospam.com>
Subject: Re: Punctuation of numbers
Newsgroups: alt.usage.english
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 2000 02:20:53 GMT
Organization: @Home Network Canada
Xref: news.shef.ac.uk alt.usage.english:416159
"Stan Brown" <brahms@mindspring.com> wrote in message
news:MPG.13386f363c85ff8298adbe@news.mindspring.com...
| Said ap1jjg@gold.cics.shef.ac.uk (john green) in
| alt.usage.english:
|
| Second, in 234,123.33 the comma is a "thousands separator", in
my
| vocabulary anyway. ISO Handbook 1, /Units of Measurement/, calls
| the separator between the whole and fractional parts a "decimal
| sign". Microsloth Windows calls them "digit grouping symbol" and
| "decimal symbol".
|
| The preferred decimal sign is the comma, and the preferred
| thousands separator is a thin space. The American way is a
period
| and a comma, respectively.
|
I like the thin space as a thousands separator where possible. In
newsgroups, which most of us read in monospaced text (and if you
don't you probably should), I think the comma is a reasonable
second choice. My sense of logic says that if the comma is going
to be sometimes used as a thousands separator, it should never be
used as a decimal symbol, as is commonly done in Europe (and
perhaps elsewhere).
Probably the reason Windows calls it a digit grouping symbol is
that sometimes long decimals are separated, as in "1 Plekka =
0.000 276 4 Euros." (Don't ask me what a Plekka is; I made it
up.) It's easier to see from this that 27,640 Plekka make 1 Euro.
I know, it's easier to write "27,640 Plekka = 1 Euro" but not if
it's part of a list...
I agree that commas/periods should never be used as decimal
separators.
--
.-------------.----------------------------------------.
| McBruce | Note new email: mcbruce1@home.com |
| ICQ 6797517 | Now surfing UseNet via cable modem! |
}-------------^----------------------------------------{
| Bruce McIntyre, 6636 Dow Ave., #203 |
| 604/438-9735 Burnaby BC, Canada V5H 3C9 |
`------------------------------------------------------'
Date: Tue, 14 Mar 2000 18:04:35 +0100 (MET)
From: Arndt Jonasson <arndt@erix.ericsson.se>
To: ap1jjg@gold.shef.ac.uk
In article <s8xpusxbud1.fsf@gold.cics.shef.ac.uk> you write:
>Hello all
>
>I need to refer to the punctation used in numbers, eg.,
>
> 3.141,592,653
>
>in a language-independant fashion. Specifically to
>* the "decimal separator" ("." or centered dot in English, "," in French)
>* the "digit-triple separator" ("," in English, "." in French)
>
>Would anyone have any suggestions or references?
I don't know good names for them, but note that a blank is sometimes
used as a "digit-triple separator", and that in Japanese, they separate
digit-quadruples instead. Maybe "digit-group separator" is a better
term.
--
Arndt Jonasson Ericsson Utvecklings AB
arndt@erix.ericsson.se ÄT2/UAB/F/P
+46 8 719 75 87 126 25 Stockholm