// *************************************************************************** // * // * Copyright (C) 1997-2002, International Business Machines // * Corporation and others. All Rights Reserved. // * // *************************************************************************** en_GB { Version { "1.0" } // Duplicated in parent // Countries { // US { "United States" } // GB { "United Kingdom" } // CA { "Canada" } // IE { "Ireland" } // AU { "Australia" } // NZ { "New Zealand" } // } CurrencyElements { "\u00A3", "GBP", ".", } DateTimeElements:intvector { 2, 1, } DateTimePatterns { "HH:mm:ss 'o''clock' z", "HH:mm:ss z", "HH:mm:ss", "HH:mm", "dd MMMM yyyy", "dd MMMM yyyy", "dd-MMM-yy", "dd/MM/yy", "{1} {0}", } // Duplicated in parent // Languages { // en { "English" } // } LocaleID:int { 0x0809 } // LocaleString { "en_GB" } // ShortCountry { "GBR" } zoneStrings { { "Europe/London", "Greenwich Mean Time", "GMT", "British Summer Time", "BST", } } //------------------------------------------------------------ // Rule Based Number Format Support //------------------------------------------------------------ // * Spellout rules for U.K. English. U.K. English has one significant // * difference from U.S. English: the names for values of 1,000,000,000 // * and higher. In American English, each successive "-illion" is 1,000 // * times greater than the preceding one: 1,000,000,000 is "one billion" // * and 1,000,000,000,000 is "one trillion." In British English, each // * successive "-illion" is one million times greater than the one before: // * "one billion" is 1,000,000,000,000 (or what Americans would call a // * "trillion"), and "one trillion" is 1,000,000,000,000,000,000. // * 1,000,000,000 in British English is "one thousand million." (This // * value is sometimes called a "milliard," but this word seems to have // * fallen into disuse.) // Could someone please correct me if I'm wrong about "milliard" falling // into disuse, or have missed any other details of how large numbers // are rendered. Also, could someone please provide me with information // on which other English-speaking countries use which system? Right now, // I'm assuming that the U.S. system is used in Canada and that all the // other English-speaking countries follow the British system. Can // someone out there confirm this? SpelloutRules { "%simplified:\n" " -x: minus >>;\n" " x.x: << point >>;\n" " zero; one; two; three; four; five; six; seven; eight; nine;\n" " ten; eleven; twelve; thirteen; fourteen; fifteen; sixteen;\n" " seventeen; eighteen; nineteen;\n" " 20: twenty[->>];\n" " 30: thirty[->>];\n" " 40: forty[->>];\n" " 50: fifty[->>];\n" " 60: sixty[->>];\n" " 70: seventy[->>];\n" " 80: eighty[->>];\n" " 90: ninety[->>];\n" " 100: << hundred[ >>];\n" " 1000: << thousand[ >>];\n" " 1,000,000: << million[ >>];\n" " 1,000,000,000,000: << billion[ >>];\n" " 1,000,000,000,000,000: =#,##0=;\n" "%default:\n" " -x: minus >>;\n" " x.x: << point >>;\n" " =%simplified=;\n" " 100: << hundred[ >%%and>];\n" " 1000: << thousand[ >%%and>];\n" " 100,000>>: << thousand[>%%commas>];\n" " 1,000,000: << million[>%%commas>];\n" " 1,000,000,000,000: << billion[>%%commas>];\n" " 1,000,000,000,000,000: =#,##0=;\n" "%%and:\n" " and =%default=;\n" " 100: =%default=;\n" "%%commas:\n" " ' and =%default=;\n" " 100: , =%default=;\n" " 1000: , <%default< thousand, >%default>;\n" " 1,000,000: , =%default=;" "%%lenient-parse:\n" " & ' ' , ',' ;\n" } }