Will that is very true, I tend to think that users only tend to use the characters on there keyboards. The ability to sort รจ (had to copy past this) is important in certain applications. I just don't think the English language uses it enough to require such a complicated default compare. Then again, this really doesn't matter because it has to be the same on both .Net and Mono. So, yah.
On Thu, Jul 22, 2010 at 12:06 AM, Atsushi Eno < [email protected]> wrote: > Exactly. Once Windows build gets stable, I'd run make run-test-ondotnet and > see what's broken under 4.0 profile. I'm even not sure if it builds now > though (I'll update my working copy only when I'm almost sure that it > builds, as it's usually broken). > > Atsushi Eno > > > On 2010/07/22 5:23, Michael Hutchinson wrote: > >> On Wed, Jul 21, 2010 at 3:35 PM, Alan<[email protected]> wrote: >> >> >>> I believe that's the default since .NET 4.0. You'll have to check MSDN to >>> be >>> sure though. I'm fairly sure there's a page explaining which type of >>> string >>> sort is used where. >>> >>> >> Yes, I'm pretty sure .NET 4.0 changed *some* string compares to be >> ordinal by default instead of culture-dependent, so perf comparisons >> between the .NET 4 and the Mono 2.0 profile could easily be biased by >> this. >> >> >> > >
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