[desperately] Maybe this is from some country where they use commas as decimal points, and also as digit separators after the decimal, and also use random other characters for decoration???

https://explainxkcd.com/3102/

  • Skua
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    232 days ago

    It’s groups of two except for that the three numbers left of the decimal point are in a group of three. So 1,00,00,000 rather than 10,000,000, for example. 1,00,00,000 is a crore, 1,00,000 is a lakh

      • Skua
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        152 days ago

        I don’t know, I’m afraid. As I understand it, the base ten positional numbering system we use in most of the world (as in, the value of each individual digit is multiplied by ten a number of times based on its position in the number) originated in northern India, but the writing of the people that developed it did not use a lot of punctuation. The modern comma comes from Europe and I’m fairly sure that the idea of a thousands separator comes from Europeans trying to write big numbers in Roman numerals. Based on that I would assume that the British colonial period introduced the idea of using a comma as a thousands separator to India. However, while Europeans were used to thinking in thousands and millions, Indians were habitually thinking in lakhs and crores, so I assume they adjusted the commas to suit that. Since the separators are literally only there to make it easier to read and do not affect any of the maths you can do with it, I don’t imagine Indians would have much reason to change their system

    • @thebestaquaman@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I’ll be honest: It’s complete insanity to use commas within a number. If you need laughably high precision, use spaces for readability. If you need a lot of zeros, use power notation.

      There is no excuse for putting commas in a number. I rest my case.

      • VindictiveJudge
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        216 hours ago

        Depending on handwriting or font, commas may be more visible than spaces.

        • @thebestaquaman@lemmy.world
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          115 hours ago

          Hard disagree. I work a lot with numbers, both hand-written and typed. I’ve yet to come across a situation where spaces are not sufficiently clear for readability. Using spaces for separation has never been an issue with letters, why would it be an issue with numbers?

          • @Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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            415 hours ago

            the problem with spaces is that it leaves it ambigous whether it’s one or multiple separate numbers, whereas a non-space separator (i think apostrophe is just obviously the best) makes it clear: 123’000’398