I've recently started using the currency option for NSDateFormatter in IB. I
could have sworn it was using $ as the currency symbol, but lately it's
started using ¤, which is a symbol I don't recognize. Anybody know what the
¤ is, and how I can get $ back as the default?
This *might* have
On Jul 21, 2009, at 11:53 AM, Andy Lee wrote:
¤
…is the all-purpose currency sign in unicode. Its use is to denote
that the attached number is a currency value when the appropriate
symbol for the locale isn't available.
--
Phil Dokas -//- p...@jetless.org
On 21 Jul 2009, at 16:53, Andy Lee wrote:
I've recently started using the currency option for NSDateFormatter
in IB. I could have sworn it was using $ as the currency symbol,
but lately it's started using ¤, which is a symbol I don't
recognize. Anybody know what the ¤ is, and how I can get
On Jul 21, 2009, at 9:53 AM, Andy Lee wrote:
Another possibility is that the ¤ only shows up on one of the
machines I've been developing on -- I might be mistaken about the
behavior changing. Anyway, I'd still like to know what it means.
It's the international symbol for currency. Try
On Tue, Jul 21, 2009 at 8:53 AM, Andy Leeag...@mac.com wrote:
I've recently started using the currency option for NSDateFormatter in IB. I
could have sworn it was using $ as the currency symbol, but lately it's
started using ¤, which is a symbol I don't recognize. Anybody know what
the ¤
On Tuesday, July 21, 2009, at 12:02PM, Nick Zitzmann n...@chronosnet.com
wrote:
It's the international symbol for currency. Try selecting it, right-
clicking, and choosing look up in dictionary for more details.
Cool. I tried to Google the symbol, but didn't think to try Dictionary. From