On Wed, 2010-07-21 at 15:30 -0400, David S wrote: > Ok. Now I'm confused. How come "CurrentCulture" for US/ENG doesn't > just run the Ordinal?
This may be hard to believe, but en-US (and en-UK) are more than just ASCII. Consider the word rèsumè, an English loan word from French. Or the "long s" [0] which, while not commonly used anymore, was used in no less than the US Bill of Rights... So, consider è: there are (at least) two ways to express it: - Precomposed as U+00E8 - With combining chars as U+0065 U+0300. Presumably when sorting entries, you would like \u00e8 to sort with \u0065\u0300, not...elsewhere [1]; at least, this is usually what users expect, as they (hopefully) don't know or care about ASCII, they just want to use their data. The other reason has to do with Windows collation [2] (and thus may or may not matter for Mono, and certainly won't matter for Silverlight in which the underlying platform's collation support is used), as the default collation table contains collation data for 70 languages [3], and (of course!) English uses the default table, so it gets a lot of this collation information "for free". - Jon [0] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_s [1] And "elsewhere" varies a lot; it could be intermingled with some other character, placed after all other characters, placed before all other characters... [2] See also the years of articles written by Michael Kaplan, in which the default table is frequently mentioned: http://blogs.msdn.com/b/michkap/ [3] http://blogs.msdn.com/b/michkap/archive/2005/04/08/406413.aspx _______________________________________________ Mono-list maillist - [email protected] http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/mono-list
