The hi_IN grouping scheme is also used in Pakistan, Nepal and most probably Sri Lanka (the entire Indian subcontinent).
I think the Apple definition is a bug, and based on FreeBSD source and they seemed to have fixed the grouping from 2;3 to 3;2 - https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/blob/671598262f152160b6b4c61f03100fc4c432ee84/share/numericdef/hi_IN.ISCII-DEV.src. It seems the FreeBSD uses the CLDR project now for locales. Regards, Jitin On Thursday, 2 July 2020 00:40:19 UTC+5:30, Daniele Nicolodi wrote: > > On 29/06/2020 11:20, Daniele Nicolodi wrote: > > On 29/06/2020 10:33, Martin Blais wrote: > >> I think Japan also has another system, IIRC blocks of four, I don't > >> recall the details. > > > > Not in the ja_JP locale installed on my system. > > After determining that the locale definitions distributed with macOS may > not be that accurate, I checked in the glibc sources (which I believe > may be the most complete and widely used source I can find). > > While it holds true that ja_JP uses the most common three digits > grouping, Taiwan uses four digits grouping, and the Indian (hi_IN) > system is used also in Bhutan (dz_BT) and Bangladesh (bn_BD). > > Cheers, > Dan > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Beancount" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/beancount/31d4e1f7-6417-4d84-870f-95428ade8c04o%40googlegroups.com.
