The reputation values on a public CV don't have any thousands separators:
Wouldn't this be easier to read (when properly localized, of course)?
The reputation values on a public CV don't have any thousands separators:
Wouldn't this be easier to read (when properly localized, of course)?
It makes sense. If you go to the user's SO profile page, you see a separator. Why not on the CV? Keeps consistency.
As a Dutch citizen, I read your proposed reputation for TeX (1,704) as a number between 1 and 2.
You could argue that an international standard is to be used, but most people don't know what this standard is. Therefore, if this is to be added, it must be optional or at the very least configurable.
You cannot argue that the separators should be English separators, just because the website is in English. After all, the separators are meant to be useful to the person reading the page; not to the owner of a network.
My CV is meant to be read by (primarily) Dutch managers, most of which will only have heard of StackExchange as a good medium to find candidates. If these managers are active SE users, they will understand the separators as they're also present on your badge in any post you write, but they aren't.
60.158
and 1.704
as reputation numbers, I would probably realize what's going on, even though in my locality the thousands separator is ,
. Anyway, I'm totally in favor of properly localizing these things, and I'm sure the SO team has the tools at their disposal to do it well.
,
is always a thousands separator, and .
always a decimal separator, and that it's the reverse in Dutch. Simple. But if you start to mix these conventions I will always have to guess what the intention is. I won't be able to tie a rope to it! ;-)
Commented
Apr 5, 2016 at 19:59
,
is the thousands separator and .
is the decimal separator. It depends on your region. For example, in South Africa ,
is used as the decimal separator and .
is the thousands separator. I imagine this is due to Afrikaans's heritage in Dutch. English is now the dominant/common language in South Africa, and the ,
/.
convention from Afrikaans/Dutch is still used, even in English contexts. But I agree with jtbandes it should probably be localized (or use the SI abbreviations).
Commented
Apr 7, 2016 at 0:14
10010010111111011
. I'm willing to allow a single space character to be inserted between each nibble, should any feeble humans have trouble parsing such numbers.
I think numbers of 4 digits are easier to read without thousands separators than with, but that may be personal. For 5 it doesn't matter that much to me, and there is only a handful of people who have 6.
So to me thousands separators wouldn't add value, in contrast to, for instance, right-aligning the numbers.
An apostrophe can be used as a thousands separator like
60'789
We could format everything as 3 digits and then use SI units. 123 or 1.23k for ( 1234) or 12.3k etc.
How about an underscore like Java allows for numeric constants? So 1_024 ?
The real question is: If we put thousands separator, which separator (or lack of separator) should be default?
Too many people using English to bother. I think there should be no separator, because for example there are localizations where ,
is a decimal point symbol, and there are localizations where .
is a thousands separator. No separator is the safest one to use.
25 111
is one number. 25 111,822
also one number.
Commented
Apr 5, 2016 at 17:52
1,999.99
) are the ones to use. On the other language Stack Overflows like Portuguese and Russian, the correct local separators should be used. Problem solved.