four-thousand, four hundred, and 3
or four point four zero three...
........Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more;..........But when the blast of war blows in our ears,.....
........Or close the wall up with our English dead...........................Then imitate the action of the tiger;.................
........In peace there's nothing so becomes a man........................Stiffen the sinews, summon up the blood,.........
........As modest stillness and humility:........................................Disguise fair nature with hard-favour'd rage!....
Dasher
"Another popup faction. Great. What's wrong with my popup blocker?" - Denelo
"Oh come on, slow and steady doesn't win any races, fast and steady does."
' Wrote:It is less common, but still widely accepted to use a comma instead of a decimal point. It means '1.4' in that case.
Blunt: Since you're Canadian, or at least live in Toronto, you're accustomed to the system used in the English-speaking parts of the world (i.e. mostly UK, USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand) where 1.4 is common usage. However, 1,4 is common usage in the rest of the world (or at least most of it). For example, my family is from Argentina and Uruguay where 1,4 is considered normal, so when I talk in Spanish with an Argentine or Uruguayan who has immigrated to the USA, I sometimes have to ask which system they're using, as they might say 1.4 in English, but 1,4 in Spanish. Are you thoroughly confused yet?:wacko:
By the way, Blunt, which system do French-Canadians use, especially in Quebec? Also, I'm not sure which system Asians may use, as they may not use Arabic numerals. However, I know that there is at least one Chinese server running 4.84, but I don't think their current server description lists the number and I can't remember if previous versions listed 4.83 or 4,83.
' Wrote:So then how do they know which one it is?
4,403 could be either
four-thousand, four hundred, and 3
or four point four zero three...
Ghost Cat: You have to make an educated guess based on the writer's location/culture and usage in context. 1,4 obviously means 1.4 in the English version and was written by a non-native English speaker (Igiss). Context is important. For example, if the reference is to the population of a town, it obviously means four-thousand, four hundred and three.
If you want to be further confused keep in mind that one billion in the USA = 1,000 X 1,000,000 (one million), but one billion in the UK = 1,000,000 X 1,000,000.:crazy:
' Wrote:Yea I figured that out a long time ago, but it still took me a while to figure out it was the equivalent of a decimal.
Wow, it is strange to see someone saying that the coma is weird for decimal numbers ^^ being half Argentinian, half French, I always used the coma to write decimal numbers. I see you come from The US or Canada, where the point is widely used. I often get confused with that difference, but you can guess if the number is a decimal or not depending on the context. I've always done that, and i sware, it works:)
Juan: The French use the coma system, 3,576 being a decimal number. But I think that the francophone Canadians use the point one, because the US is right next to them. (it's a guess, I may be wrong:)). By the way, it's good to see another Argentinian (well, in part at least) around here ^^
So... do calculators in non-anglo counties use periods or commas to denote decimals? This is wierd. I consider myself a pretty well informed 35 year old Canadian and this is the first I've ever heard of there being a difference. Hahaha.