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Universal currency sign

16 pointsby pbnaiduover 16 years ago

4 comments

mixmaxover 16 years ago
Unfortunately nobody recognises the universal currency sign, so from a usability standpoint it doesn't make much sense to use it.
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zandorgover 16 years ago
Why is it 3d? That makes it really hard to figure out what shape it is.
eruover 16 years ago
From <a href="http://ascii-table.com/pronunciation-guide.php" rel="nofollow">http://ascii-table.com/pronunciation-guide.php</a> (They, too, stole it from somewhere):<p>In the socialist countries, they used and are using all kinds of IBM clones (hardware + software). It was a common practice just to rename everything (IBM 360 → ESER 1040, etc...).<p>Of course the "dollar" sign had to be renamed - it became the "international currency symbol" which looks like a circle with 4 rays spreading from it: ¤ Because it looks like a (small) shining sun, in the German Democratic Republic it was usually called "Sonne" (sun).
DLWormwoodover 16 years ago
I’m one of those few people who knew what this symbol meant: the character was a standard symbol in the “MacRoman” repertoire before the introduction of the Euro replaced that code point (high-ASCII code 219, or shift-option-2) about the time of Mac OS 8 or 9.