I do a tax return for a guy who has some income in India. Their overall number formatting is so foreign to me, when I did this guy's return for the first time, I had to screenshot a couple of the numbers and send them to an Indian friend of mine to ask what the hell the number was.
So after the first 3 zeroes, it's a comma every second zero. And there are local names for those denominations.
So
10
100
1,000
10,000
1,00,000 = 1 Lakh or 1 Lac
10,00,000 = 10 Lakhs/Lacs
1,00,00,000 = 1 Crore
People generally don't use the next set of names which are called 1 Arab and then 1 Kharab and probably a few more, they just start saying 1000 crores or lakhs of crore etc.
Many people also use millions and billions instead of the above.
And then decimals are denoted by a period, not commas.
Kind of related, our financial year is from 1st April till 31st March, so you gotta watch out for quarter numbers not matching. Our financial Q1 is the calendar Q2...
While I never enjoy the fiscal years some other countries use, I'm accustomed enough to work with them. It was the comma notation you've laid out that threw me the first time I saw it.
Yes, they missed the word "dot" (as long as we can trust the unsourced Wikipedia list they probably used, I cannot find another English-language source confirming that). I was just kidding (as indicated by "/s").
100 times. I do everything in English on my computer and for some reason that day my banking session was opened in French. So it ignored the decimal point for cents in the number I entered. I asked to transfer 160.50 bucks (or whatever the exact number was), and it transferred 16 050 instead. Luckily I could fix it with a phone call.
And it's wrong, though. In Russia, we use space to separate thousands (with the exception of 4 digit numbers) - 1, 10, 100, 1000, 10 000, 100 000, 1 000 000 etc. People who care about formatting use a special thin space instead.
For decimal point, commas are used in bureaucratic environments because of some GOST or something, while normal people use dots, because windows calculator doesn't accept commas, and neither does Excel if I'm not mistaken. So it's kind of both on that front.
i just use an apostrophe, why make things complicated? 1'000'000.00 should be unambigous to almost everyone, provided they can rub some braincells together.
Reminded of a fun story on r/HFY which the author has posted to !hfy@lemmy.world that explicitly deals with different countries using different characters to separate decimals from integers.
That story makes no sense, if you want to order 98 of something you'd write 98, not 98,000 or 98.000, no matter what decimal separater you prefer, especially for something where ordering a fraction makes no sense.
But I never put commas or points into the contract?”
Either he put 98000, or he wrote 98 and some spreadsheet autoformatter changed it to 98.000 and he never noticed because he's not supposed to be a competent character.
In the end I just took it as a fun story, but I get finding something unrealistic, it not passing your willing suspension of disbelief, and pulling you out of the story and making it hard to enjoy.
Yep that's the irony of English systems, it's only them and their colonies and ex colonies that even consider it. Left hand drive and measuring system using variable size biological parts included.
I'm under the impression that for Switzerland, we normally use "," (or at least for handwriting, that's how I learned to write it at least) but because of shitty locale support, people use "." on computers