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On Mon, 21 Oct 2024 11:57:33 +0100, liz@poppyrecords.invalid.invalidNot a schematic, but many years (ok, decades) ago I was working in France and was surprised when a programmer interpreted a comma in my code as a decimal point. It was Forth code, and the comma in fact represented a double (32 bit) number. Lots of confusion. Kesker-say, nespar, un petit d'un petit s'étonne aux Halles and so on.
(Liz Tuddenham) wrote:
Edward Rawde <invalid@invalid.invalid> wrote:Do French engineers use the same convention on their schematics?
>"john larkin" <JL@gct.com> wrote in messagenews:risahjpn2kfue87dqm6t2461a966ncv9in@4ax.com...
>
[...] > >>Maybe european decimal points slide off drawings and fall on the>
floor. Robust American decimal points and schematic connect dots don't
do that.
I wasn't aware that there was a difference between European and american
decimal points.
There is a difference between English-speking ones and French-speaking
ones: the French ones look like commas.
I can't recall ever seeing a French schematic, actually.
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