Em 10 de junho de 2010 Allin escreveu:
On Thu, 10 Jun 2010, Henrique Andrade wrote:
>
> > When I try to export some data to a .csv file (using the
> > following menu path File -> Export data -> CSV) I get "." as the
> > decimal point instead of ",". I'm using a Mac with the
> > pt_BR.UTF-8. In the
Am 10.06.2010 15:13, schrieb Alan G Isaac:
>
>
> Again, why is the question not rather:
> where is the documentation of this file format?
> It seems to me that gretl should
>
> - point to or provide documentation
> - read and write the documented format by default (in *all* locales)
> - possibl
Dear GRETL folk, greetings from Paris !
Let me susggest how i found a (not so yet) definitive answer to this problem:
as you may know, in Latin countries of old europe, the decimal separator is
the comma, but in XP you can modify the default national parameters: you can
change all signs as you se
On Thu, 10 Jun 2010, Allin Cottrell wrote:
>
> On Thu, 10 Jun 2010, Henrique Andrade wrote:
>
>> When I try to export some data to a .csv file (using the
>> following menu path File -> Export data -> CSV) I get "." as the
>> decimal point instead of ",". I'm using a Mac with the
>> pt_BR.UTF-8. In
On Thu, 10 Jun 2010, Sven Schreiber wrote:
> Am 10.06.2010 10:33, schrieb Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti:
>> On Thu, 10 Jun 2010, Sven Schreiber wrote:
>>
>>> CSV files nowadays aren't even necessarily "comma-separated" and are
>>> surely *not* intended by many users to be portable across countries.
>>
Am 10.06.2010 10:33, schrieb Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti:
> On Thu, 10 Jun 2010, Sven Schreiber wrote:
>
>> CSV files nowadays aren't even necessarily "comma-separated" and are
>> surely *not* intended by many users to be portable across countries.
>> (Even though that might be nice, but it just isn
Em 10 de junho de 2010 Allin escreveu:
On Thu, 10 Jun 2010, Henrique Andrade wrote:
>
> > When I try to export some data to a .csv file (using the
> > following menu path File -> Export data -> CSV) I get "." as the
> > decimal point instead of ",". I'm using a Mac with the
> > pt_BR.UTF-8. In the
On Thu, 10 Jun 2010, Sven Schreiber wrote:
> CSV files nowadays aren't even necessarily "comma-separated" and are
> surely *not* intended by many users to be portable across countries.
> (Even though that might be nice, but it just isn't the case.)
Says who?
Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti
Dipartim
> Am 10.06.2010 15:13, schrieb Alan G Isaac:
> > Again, why is the question not rather:
> > where is the documentation of this file format?
> > It seems to me that gretl should
> >
> > - point to or provide documentation
> > - read and write the documented format by default (in *all* locales)
> >
Am 10.06.2010 08:30, schrieb Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti:
> On Thu, 10 Jun 2010, Henrique Andrade wrote:
>
>> Dear Gretl community,
>>
>> When I try to export some data to a .csv file (using the following
>> menu path File -> Export data -> CSV) I get "." as the decimal point
>> instead of ",". I'm
On Thu, 10 Jun 2010, Henrique Andrade wrote:
> Define "change":
> If I have a .csv formatted according to Brazilian settings (i.e. "," as the
> decimal
> point) I can use double-clicking to open my data using Excel. Otherwise I
> need to
> open the .csv file in a text editor and replace all "."
On 6/10/2010 7:04 AM, Sven Schreiber wrote:
> the question is: does gretl want to enforce a non-existent standard
> because we (including me) like that behavior; or does gretl surrender to
> the facts of the csv ecosystem and give users the option to produce
> different variants of csv files.
>
On Thu, 10 Jun 2010, Henrique Andrade wrote:
> Dear Gretl community,
>
> When I try to export some data to a .csv file (using the following menu
> path File -> Export data -> CSV) I get "." as the decimal point instead
> of ",". I'm using a Mac with the pt_BR.UTF-8. In the Gretl's preferences
On Thu, 10 Jun 2010, Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti wrote:
> On Thu, 10 Jun 2010, Sven Schreiber wrote:
>
> > Am 10.06.2010 10:33, schrieb Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti:
> >> On Thu, 10 Jun 2010, Sven Schreiber wrote:
> >>
> >>> CSV files nowadays aren't even necessarily "comma-separated" and are
> >>> su
On Thu, 10 Jun 2010, Henrique Andrade wrote:
> When I try to export some data to a .csv file (using the
> following menu path File -> Export data -> CSV) I get "." as the
> decimal point instead of ",". I'm using a Mac with the
> pt_BR.UTF-8. In the Gretl's preferences menu, the option "Use
> loc
On 6/10/2010 3:35 AM, Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti wrote:
> While I am against this on ideological grounds, I have to admit that a
> checkbox wouldn't be difficult to add. But I hate the idea of giving
> support or credibility to the concept of "national CSV" format, which
> is, after all, one of t
Dear Riccardo, thanks for your answer!
Em 10 de junho de 2010 Riccardo escreveu:
On Thu, 10 Jun 2010, Henrique Andrade wrote:
>
> Dear Gretl community,
>>
>> When I try to export some data to a .csv file (using the following menu
>> path File -> Export data -> CSV) I get "." as the decimal point
Dear Gretl community,
When I try to export some data to a .csv file (using the following menu
path File -> Export data -> CSV) I get "." as the decimal point instead of
",". I'm using a Mac with the pt_BR.UTF-8. In the Gretl's preferences menu,
the option "Use locale setting for decimal point" is
18 matches
Mail list logo