The decimal separator is a symbol used to mark the boundary between the integral and the fractional parts of a decimal numeral.
In the Middle Ages, before printing, a bar over the units digit was used to separate the integral part of a number from its fractional part. However, its regular usage and classification is attributed to , a Persian scientist. Later, a separator (a short, roughly vertical, ink stroke) between the units and tenths position became the norm. When this character was typeset, it was convenient to use the existing comma or period instead.
In France, the period was already in use in printing to make Roman numerals more readable, so the comma was chosen. Many other countries also chose to use the comma to mark the decimal units position. It has been made standard by the ISO for international blueprints.
However, English-speaking countries took the comma to separate sequences of three digits. In the U.S., the period (.), which is called a "stop" or "full stop" in some other countries, was used as the standard decimal separator. In the nations of the British Empire, although the period could be used in typewritten material, the point (middle dot: ·), which can also be called an interpunct, was preferred for the decimal separator in technologies that could accommodate it. This had the advantage of reducing confusion in the countries that used the period to separate groups of digits and it was generally clearer in handwriting (pariticularlly when writing on a dotted baseline as on many forms). However, as the middle dot was already in common use in the mathematics world to indicate multiplication, the SI rejected this use of the middle dot as the decimal separator. However, the use of the period as decimal point was not banned. British aviation magazines thus switched to the US form in the late twentieth century. When South Africa adopted the metric system, it adopted the comma as its decimal separator. For further details, see Comma countries below.
In the Arab world and Iran, where Arabic digits are used for writing numbers, a different character called momayyez -- which is written like a forward slash -- is used to separate the integer and fractional parts of numbers. To separate sequences of three digits, a comma or blank space may be used; however, this is not a standard. In Farsi, there is a small difference between the "comma" character used in sentences and the comma-like character used to separate sequences of three digits.
The separator in non-decimal numeral systems may be referred to as a radix point.
The following is ordered chronologically, by when each country adopted the use:
In countries with a decimal comma, the decimal point is also common as the "international" notation and under the influence of e.g. electronic calculators using the decimal point. Computer programs can usually be adapted to use the local separator, but even on the same computer it is not uncommon that some programs use commas and some use points.
Note: notations like "12,345", "12.345", "12,345.678", and "12.345,678" are ambiguous by a factor 1000 if the notational system is not known.
Countries where a dot is used to mark the radix point include:
Countries where a comma is used to mark the radix point include:
Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, UAE
Десетична запетая | Dezimaltrennzeichen | Separador decimal | 소수점 | 小数点 | Decimalna vejica | Decimaltecken
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"Decimal separator".
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