Annoying comma.

Hi.

Please replace the annoying comma in the "system info" header section (as seen in the attached image) of CCleaner (and, maybe, other piriform applications too ?) with a dot "." character in the upcoming versions.

Since the comma "," character is already used for splitting pieces of the info sentence, it looks annoying.

Thanks! :D

Keep up the good work!

post-60918-0-78275000-1330428683_thumb.jpg

Or maybe change the commas into slashes; from "," to "/".

That appears to be the continental numbering convention, where a comma is used for the decimal point (although the time taken is in English, and bytes removed is in Continental). Which language are you using?

I have a dot on my English install, although I haven't upgraded to the latest vers (waiting for Slim - just don't tell me it's there) and I'm 32 bits.

I have a dot on my English install

I also have the dot using English in the newest version. Must be Windows itself doing some character substitution.

Screenshot:

06015df154a.png

I've a dot here. Just my 2ยข

Hi. I'm using English language with Romanian locales. Ok. So the problem is in the current system locale settings. Can't it just be replaced with a dot, without the locale headache?...it's just a string, after all...

That appears to be the continental numbering convention, where a comma is used for the decimal point (although the time taken is in English, and bytes removed is in Continental). Which language are you using?

I have a dot on my English install, although I haven't upgraded to the latest vers (waiting for Slim - just don't tell me it's there) and I'm 32 bits.

it's just a string and that string is read via the systems settings. You use a , for your decimal and therefore get a ,

really it is just simple logic, and your asking ccleaner to do more work (for zero gain) to tell it to use the dot and not what the system uses. On top of that in doing this, we would be filled with "ccleaner says I have 8 thousand Gigabytes of RAM"

it's just a string and that string is read via the systems settings. You use a , for your decimal and therefore get a ,

really it is just simple logic, and your asking ccleaner to do more work (for zero gain) to tell it to use the dot and not what the system uses. On top of that in doing this, we would be filled with "ccleaner says I have 8 thousand Gigabytes of RAM"

Anyway, it looks ugly. :blink:

Set CCleaner to run in En_GB or En_US and it'll be a period.

Under USA English, 32 Bit Windows 7, I've a comma, and it does look ugly...