• @lmmarsano
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    36 hours ago

    Hexbear.net now at 710$ (Update: it’s now 1921$)

    figure before $

    image shows conventional placement of $ before figure

    Can someone explain selective blindness of where to place the dollar sign ($) when correct examples stare people right in the face?

    • @[email protected]
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      6 hours ago

      Convention is different everywhere, $ value and value $ are both seen in Canada for example, former being more common in English, latter in French

      Like . vs , for decimal notation, people are going to use what they’re familiar with.

      • @lmmarsano
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        4 hours ago

        $ value and value $ are both seen in Canada for example, former being more common in English, latter in French

        Canadian conventions vary by language. In English, I’ve only ever seen $ then figure.

        The ISO currency code can go after (eg, 1 USD, 1 CAD).

        It’s a national convention: Wikipedia claims that in all English-speaking countries (and most of Latin America), the symbol precedes the amount.

        If they’re a non-native English writer, I guess that would explain it. An awful lot of people in the US seem to do this, too. 🤷

    • @[email protected]OP
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      5 hours ago

      At least it reflects the way the number is said. Or would you say “it would cost them dollars 1921”?

      • @lmmarsano
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        14 hours ago

        English writing isn’t English speech & doesn’t model it accurately: for that, there’s IPA.

        If breaking established conventions for written English is a ploy to draw attention, then mission accomplished I guess?

      • @[email protected]
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        15 hours ago

        The way the number is said? You mean

        “dollars nineteen twenty one” or

        “dollars one thousand nine hundred twenty one” or

        “dollars one nine two one?”