A Qt bug-reporter has brought to my attention [0] that the Royal Spanish
Academy of Language says [1] that a thin space should be used as
digit-grouping separator, not the dot currently given in CLDR v45's
es.xml - I can't actually read Spanish, but I've no reason to mistrust
the reporter's translation of it.
[0] https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTBUG-127966
[1] https://www.rae.es/ortograf%C3%ADa/los-n%C3%BAmeros-enteros-y-el-separador-de-millares
How, if at all, does that bear on CLDR's criteria for what to use for es_ES ?
Eddy.
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I already did the latter, as you will find on
>> [0] https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTBUG-127966
Eddy.
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The reporter has since told me this has already been reported:
https://unicode-org.atlassian.net/browse/CLDR-15508
Mark Davis Ⓤ (12 August 2024 23:09) replied:
> CLDR is designed to follow customary, common use in the country/ies in
> question. This is sometimes different than what is recognized as
> official; it depends on how widespread that official practice is
> followed in practice.
Thank you. That will help me explain such discrepancies to those who
use CLDR data via QLocale in future ;^>
Eddy.