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From: | Léa Gris |
Subject: | Re: built-in printf %f parameter format depend on LC_NUMERIC |
Date: | Fri, 12 Jul 2019 21:55:53 +0200 |
User-agent: | Telnet/1.0 [tlh] (PDP11/DEC) |
Le 12/07/2019 à 21:16, Chet Ramey écrivait :
On 7/12/19 12:46 PM, Léa Gris wrote:Le 09/07/2019 à 22:02, Chet Ramey écrivait :These are up to the system's strtol/strtod. I don't know of too many strtol implementations that use the thousands separator and numeric grouping.Chet and you other Bash maintainers or contributors dudes: I can foresee the implications and blockages even lightly considering the possibility to align the Bash's built-in printf behavior with the %f argument with the sibling GNU Coreutils printf implementation.I don't think I explained this very well. For input, the printf builtin relies on strtod(3) to parse the string into a floating point number. For output, it relies on printf(3) to display a floating point number as a string. I'm not really interested in re-implementing either one if the system libc provides one that's perfectly acceptable. On POSIX-conformant systems, those library functions generally honor the locale's decimal_point character as the radix character. The `bc' you're using isn't POSIX conformant.
True, and fortunately this is exactly how I understood your detailed and informed explanations for how and why it is this way.
By-the-way, as a user or as a Bash script writer, I am more concerned by the portability of the data a Bash script can handle. And for floating point numbers data, the one locale format I am sure to exist in any kind of the most lightly POSIX compliant systems, is the POSIX or C locale.
If a bc is POSIX compliant, input and output numbers based on the locale, then I am almost fine with it. I can still set the locale to match the bc script number formats. It would be quite annoying having a bc script with numbers formatted to the da_DK locale that works only with a POSIX compliant bc command and only on systems with the da_DK locale available, but I am sure I can run any bc script that is using numbers formatted to the POSIX locale if I switch the local to POSIX before running the bc script.
The issue with Bash's printf will spawn later down the line. When I need to output floating-point numbers the format of the user locale LC_NUMERIC, because human beings will read these numbers rather than another computer program. I will also have to provide Bash's printf with numbers of this locale format as parameters. I can not count on Bash's printf to bridge POSIX locale formatted floating-point numbers to any kind of user locale format.
This is exactly here that my modest lcnumconv Bash library can help.Machine processing, and I count printf arguments as machine processing, is best done with POSIX locale formatted numbers. lcnumconv can also help deal with human input of floating-point numbers conversion to POSIX for processing these. Because Bash only know about strings and internally about integers. The built-in read can not translate floating point numbers to anything. It is just strings of characters. In this regard, printf support for floating point numbers is an alien ^^.
-- Léa Gris
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