On 3/6/14, 19:02 , Serge Monkewitz wrote:
> On Mar 6, 2014, at 5:30 PM, Kian-Tat Lim <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
>>> The lat-lon ordering seems to prevail online ("latitude longitude"
>>> vs "longitude latitude" in google-> 16M vs 470k).
>>
>> Perhaps because English says "north, south, east, west" for the
>> cardinal directions. Chinese uses "east, south, west, north". The
>> Google hits for jingdu weidu (longitude latitude) vs. weidu jingdu
>> (latitude longitude) in Simplified Chinese characters favor the former.
>
> If we really aren't allowed to use 经度 and and 纬度 as C++ identifiers,
> then my vote goes to lon, lat.
I couldn't stop myself from trying:
=======
mjuric@gamont:~/test$ cat x.cpp
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
const char *经度 = "Hello";
const char *纬度 = "World";
std::cout << 经度 << " " << 纬度 << std::endl;
return 0;
}
mjuric@gamont:~/test$ clang++ -v
Apple LLVM version 5.0 (clang-500.2.79) (based on LLVM 3.3svn)
Target: x86_64-apple-darwin13.1.0
Thread model: posix
mjuric@gamont:~/test$ clang++ x.cpp
mjuric@gamont:~/test$ ./a.out
Hello World
=======
I'm amazed :).
(but, no, we're not allowed to use it :)).
--
Mario Juric,
Data Mgmt. Project Scientist, Large Synoptic Survey Telescope
Web : http://research.majuric.org Phone : +1 617 744 9003
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