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Re: thousands separator
From: |
Aharon Robbins |
Subject: |
Re: thousands separator |
Date: |
Wed, 08 Jul 2009 23:09:45 +0300 |
Hi All.
> Date: Wed, 08 Jul 2009 20:16:24 +0300
> From: Eli Zaretskii <address@hidden>
> Subject: Re: thousands separator
> To: Aharon Robbins <address@hidden>
> Cc: address@hidden, address@hidden
>
> > Date: Wed, 08 Jul 2009 08:22:30 +0300
> > From: Aharon Robbins <address@hidden>
> > Cc: address@hidden, address@hidden
> >
> > > So I'm beginning to suspect that there's a bug in Gawk, after all.
> >
> > Eli,
> >
> > What do you get for
> >
> > BEGIIN { printf("%'d\n", 1234567 }
> >
> > A random character each time?
>
> No, I get the same result, "1234567", every time. But the thousands
> separator printed by your test program is a comma.
Strange. There is still something weird going on. The "grouping" field
is actually supposed to be an array of small values. A new program
is below. Here is what the output looks like on my Linux box:
$ LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 ./thousep
thousands_sep = ,
loc.grouping[0] = 3
loc.grouping[1] = 3
I'd like to know what we get on XP and on Vista.
Thanks,
Arnold
------------------- thousep.c ----------------
#include <stdio.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <locale.h>
struct lconv loc; /* current locale */
int
main(int argc, char **argv)
{
int i;
setlocale(LC_NUMERIC, "");
loc = *localeconv();
printf("thousands_sep = %s\n", loc.thousands_sep);
for (i = 0; i < 12 && loc.grouping[i] != 0 && loc.grouping[i] !=
CHAR_MAX; i++) {
printf("loc.grouping[%d] = %d\n", i, loc.grouping[i]);
}
if (loc.grouping[i] == CHAR_MAX)
printf("loc.grouping[%d] = CHAR_MAX\n", i);
return 0;
}
- Re: thousands separator, (continued)
Re: thousands separator, Gary Ashburn, 2009/07/06
Re: thousands separator, Aharon Robbins, 2009/07/07
Re: thousands separator, Aharon Robbins, 2009/07/08
Re: thousands separator,
Aharon Robbins <=
Re: thousands separator, KIMURA Koichi, 2009/07/09
Re: thousands separator, Aharon Robbins, 2009/07/09
Re: thousands separator, Aharon Robbins, 2009/07/09