Steven D'Aprano writes: > With full respect to haiyang kang, hear-say from one person can hardly > be described as "strong" evidence
That's *disrespectful* nonsense. What Haiyang reported was not hearsay, it's direct observation of what he sees around him and personal experience, plus extrapolation. Look up "hearsay," please. Furthermore, he provided good *objective* reason (excessive cost, to which I can also testify, in several different input methods for Japanese) why numbers simply would not be input that way. What's left is copy/paste via the mouse. I assure you, every day I see dozens of Japanese copy/pasting *only* ASCII numerals, and the sales figures for Microsoft Excel (not to mention the download numbers for Open Office) strongly suggest that 30 million Japanese salarymen are similarly dedicated to ASCII. (That's not "hearsay" either, that's direct observation and extrapolation, which is more than the "we need float to translate Arabic" supporters can offer.) I have seen only *one* use case: it's a toy for sophisticated programmers who want to think of themselves as broadminded. We've seen several examples of that in this thread, so I can't deny that is a real use case. Please, give us just *one* more real use case that isn't "somebody might". _______________________________________________ Python-Dev mailing list Python-Dev@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com