// *************************************************************************** // * // * Copyright (C) 2004, International Business Machines // * Corporation and others. All Rights Reserved. // * // *************************************************************************** // ja { //------------------------------------------------------------ // Rule Based Number Format Support //------------------------------------------------------------ // * Spellout rules for Japanese. In Japanese, there really isn't any // * distinction between a number written out in digits and a number // * written out in words: the ideographic characters are both digits // * and words. This rule set provides two variants: %traditional // * uses the traditional CJK numerals (which are also used in China // * and Korea). %financial uses alternate ideographs for many numbers // * that are harder to alter than the traditional numerals (one could // * fairly easily change a one to // * a three just by adding two strokes, for example). This is also done in // * the other countries using Chinese idographs, but different ideographs // * are used in those places. // Can someone supply me with the right fraud-proof ideographs for // Simplified and Traditional Chinese, and for Korean? Can someone // supply me with information on negatives and decimals? SpelloutRules { "%financial:\n" "\u96f6; \u58f1; \u5f10; \u53c2; \u56db; \u4f0d; \u516d; \u4e03; \u516b; \u4e5d;\n" "\u62fe[>>];\n" "20: <<\u62fe[>>];\n" "100: <<\u767e[>>];\n" "1000: <<\u5343[>>];\n" "10,000: <<\u4e07[>>];\n" "100,000,000: <<\u5104[>>];\n" "1,000,000,000,000: <<\u5146[>>];\n" "10,000,000,000,000,000: =#,##0=;\n" "%traditional:\n" "\u96f6; \u4e00; \u4e8c; \u4e09; \u56db; \u4e94; \u516d; \u4e03; \u516b; \u4e5d;\n" "\u5341[>>];\n" "20: <<\u5341[>>];\n" "100: <<\u767e[>>];\n" "1000: <<\u5343[>>];\n" "10,000: <<\u4e07[>>];\n" "100,000,000: <<\u5104[>>];\n" "1,000,000,000,000: <<\u5146[>>];\n" "10,000,000,000,000,000: =#,##0=;" } }