blob: a41924486e0a05263e75903cd72e6115917e9efb [file] [log] [blame]
// ***************************************************************************
// *
// * Copyright (C) 1997-2003, International Business Machines
// * Corporation and others. All Rights Reserved.
// *
// ***************************************************************************
fr_CH {
Version { "2.0" }
DateTimeElements:intvector {
2,
4,
}
DateTimePatterns {
"HH.mm:ss' h' z",
"HH:mm:ss z",
"HH:mm:ss",
"HH:mm",
"EEEE, d MMMM yyyy",
"d MMMM yyyy",
"d MMM yy",
"dd.MM.yy",
"{1} {0}",
}
NumberElements {
".",
"'",
";",
"%",
"0",
"#",
"-",
"E",
"\u2030",
"\u221E",
"\uFFFD",
".",
"+",
}
NumberPatterns {
"#,##0.###;-#,##0.###",
"\u00A4 #,##0.00;\u00A4-#,##0.00",
"#,##0%",
"#E0",
}
//------------------------------------------------------------
// Rule Based Number Format Support
//------------------------------------------------------------
// * Spellout rules for Swiss French. Swiss French differs from French French
// * in that it does have words for 70, 80, and 90. This rule set shows them,
// * and is simpler as a result.
// again, I'm missing information on negative numbers and decimals for
// these to rule sets. Also, I'm not 100% sure about Swiss French. Is
// this correct? Is "onze cents" commonly used for 1,100 in both France
// and Switzerland? Can someone fill me in on the rules for the other
// French-speaking countries? I've heard conflicting opinions on which
// version is used in Canada, and I understand there's an alternate set
// of words for 70, 80, and 90 that is used somewhere, but I don't know
// what those words are or where they're used.
SpelloutRules {
"%main:\n"
"-x: moins >>;\n"
"x.x: << virgule >>;\n"
"z\u00e9ro; un; deux; trois; quatre; cinq; six; sept; huit; neuf;\n"
"dix; onze; douze; treize; quatorze; quinze; seize;\n"
" dix-sept; dix-huit; dix-neuf;\n"
"20: vingt[->%%alt-ones>];\n"
"30: trente[->%%alt-ones>];\n"
"40: quarante[->%%alt-ones>];\n"
"50: cinquante[->%%alt-ones>];\n"
"60: soixante[->%%alt-ones>];\n"
// notice new words for 70, 80, and 90
"70: septante[->%%alt-ones>];\n"
"80: huitante[->%%alt-ones>];\n"
"90: nonante[->%%alt-ones>];\n"
"100: cent[ >>];\n"
"200: << cents[ >>];\n"
"1000: mille[ >>];\n"
"1100>: onze cents[ >>];\n"
"1200: mille >>;\n"
"2000: << mille[ >>];\n"
"1,000,000: << million[ >>];\n"
"1,000,000,000: << milliarde[ >>];\n"
"1,000,000,000,000: << billion[ >>];\n"
"1,000,000,000,000,000: =#,##0=;\n"
"%%alt-ones:\n"
"; et-un; =%main=;"
}
}