1 | DILAI001 ; ; 02-NOV-2012 ; 11/14/12 11:06am
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2 | ;;22.2;LANGUAGE FILE INITS;;NOV 02, 2012
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3 | Q:'DIFQ(.85) F I=1:2 S X=$T(Q+I) Q:X="" S Y=$E($T(Q+I+1),4,999),X=$E(X,4,999) S:$A(Y)=126 I=I+1,Y=$E(Y,2,999)_$E($T(Q+I+1),5,999) S:$A(Y)=61 Y=$E(Y,2,999) X NO E S @X=Y
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4 | Q Q
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5 | ;;^DIC(.85,0,"GL")
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6 | ;;=^DI(.85,
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7 | ;;^DIC("B","LANGUAGE",.85)
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8 | ;;=
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9 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%",0)
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10 | ;;=^1.005
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11 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",0)
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12 | ;;=^^27^27^3121101^
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13 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",1,0)
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14 | ;;=The LANGUAGE file is used both to officially identify a language, and to
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15 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",2,0)
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16 | ;;=store MUMPS code needed to do language-specific conversions of data such
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17 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",3,0)
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18 | ;;=as dates and numbers.
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19 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",4,0)
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20 | ;;=
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21 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",5,0)
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22 | ;;=Fileman distributes entries for the following languages:
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23 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",6,0)
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24 | ;;= ID Number (.001) Name (.01)
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25 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",7,0)
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26 | ;;= 1 English
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27 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",8,0)
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28 | ;;= 2 German
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29 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",9,0)
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30 | ;;= 3 Spanish
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31 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",10,0)
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32 | ;;= 4 French
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33 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",11,0)
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34 | ;;= 5 Finnish
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35 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",12,0)
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36 | ;;= 6 Italian
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37 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",13,0)
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38 | ;;= 7 Portuguese
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39 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",14,0)
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40 | ;;= 10 Arabic
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41 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",15,0)
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42 | ;;= 11 Russian
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43 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",16,0)
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44 | ;;= 12 Greek
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45 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",17,0)
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46 | ;;= 18 Hebrew
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47 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",18,0)
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48 | ;;=
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49 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",19,0)
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50 | ;;=The ISO-639-1 and ISO-639-2 compatible language file is distributed in the
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51 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",20,0)
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52 | ;;=DILAINIT routines, shipped with Fileman 22.2.
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53 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",21,0)
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54 | ;;=
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55 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",22,0)
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56 | ;;=A pointer to this file from the TRANSLATION multiple on the DIALOG file
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57 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",23,0)
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58 | ;;=also allows non-English text to be returned via FileMan calls.
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59 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",24,0)
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60 | ;;=
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61 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",25,0)
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62 | ;;=A note to VISTA developers: Although users can select entries by name,
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63 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",26,0)
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64 | ;;=software should use the official two or three letter codes to eliminiate
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65 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%D",27,0)
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66 | ;;=mistakes resulting from languages that have similar spelling.
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67 | ;;^DIC(.85,"%MSC")
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68 | ;;=3121114.111954
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69 | ;;^DD(.85,0)
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70 | ;;=FIELD^^10^20
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71 | ;;^DD(.85,0,"DDA")
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72 | ;;=N
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73 | ;;^DD(.85,0,"DT")
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74 | ;;=3121101
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75 | ;;^DD(.85,0,"ID",.02)
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76 | ;;=W " ",$P(^(0),U,2)
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77 | ;;^DD(.85,0,"ID",.03)
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78 | ;;=W " ",$P(^(0),U,3)
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79 | ;;^DD(.85,0,"IX","F",.8501,.01)
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80 | ;;=
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81 | ;;^DD(.85,0,"NM","LANGUAGE")
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82 | ;;=
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83 | ;;^DD(.85,0,"PT",.007,.001)
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84 | ;;=
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85 | ;;^DD(.85,0,"PT",.008,.001)
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86 | ;;=
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87 | ;;^DD(.85,0,"PT",.009,.001)
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88 | ;;=
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89 | ;;^DD(.85,0,"PT",.4,709.1)
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90 | ;;=
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91 | ;;^DD(.85,0,"PT",.4,1819.1)
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92 | ;;=
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93 | ;;^DD(.85,0,"PT",.847,.01)
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94 | ;;=
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95 | ;;^DD(.85,0,"PT",.85,.08)
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96 | ;;=
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97 | ;;^DD(.85,0,"PT",.85,.09)
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98 | ;;=
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99 | ;;^DD(.85,0,"PT",1.008,.001)
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100 | ;;=
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101 | ;;^DD(.85,0,"PT",200,200.07)
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102 | ;;=
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103 | ;;^DD(.85,0,"PT",8989.3,207)
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104 | ;;=
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105 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,0)
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106 | ;;=ID NUMBER^NJ10,0^^ ^K:+X'=X!(X>9999999999)!(X<1)!(X?.E1"."1.N) X
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107 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,3)
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108 | ;;=Type a number between 1 and 9999999999, 0 decimal digits.
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109 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,21,0)
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110 | ;;=^^3^3^3121031^^
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111 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,21,1,0)
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112 | ;;=A number that is used to uniquely identify a language. This number
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113 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,21,2,0)
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114 | ;;=corresponds to the Kernel system variable DUZ("LANG"), which is set
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115 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,21,3,0)
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116 | ;;=during Kernel signon to signify which language Fileman should use.
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117 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,0)
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118 | ;;=^^31^31^3121031^
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119 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,1,0)
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120 | ;;=Entries in this file are standardized, with the contents controlled by
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121 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,2,0)
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122 | ;;=the Fileman Primary Development Team. The ID Number field is used to help
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123 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,3,0)
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124 | ;;=protect referential integrity in VISTA databases during upgrades to the
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125 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,4,0)
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126 | ;;=file. ID Number assignment corresponds to the order in which languages
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127 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,5,0)
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128 | ;;=were added to the file. They were added in segments.
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129 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,6,0)
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130 | ;;=
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131 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,7,0)
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132 | ;;=The first segment consists of language numbers 1-7, 10-12, and 18, which
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133 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,8,0)
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134 | ;;=were the first eleven languages added, in order. English is first because
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135 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,9,0)
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136 | ;;=Fileman was originally written in English. German is second because
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137 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,10,0)
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138 | ;;=Marcus Werners of Germany led the effort to create Fileman's dialog
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139 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,11,0)
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140 | ;;=framework, to make translating VISTA into other languages easier.
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141 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,12,0)
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142 | ;;=Spanish, French, Finnish, Italian, and Portuguese follow in the order in
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143 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,13,0)
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144 | ;;=which the Fileman team was approached by potential translators about
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145 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,14,0)
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146 | ;;=adding those languages to the file (though Finnish actually predates all
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147 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,15,0)
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148 | ;;=other translation efforts except English). Arabic was assigned ID Number
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149 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,16,0)
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150 | ;;=10 instead of 8 in recognition of the debt English owes Arabic for
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151 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,17,0)
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152 | ;;=introducing the decimal numbering system to Europe. Russian and Greek
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153 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,18,0)
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154 | ;;=were the next two translations the Fileman team was approached about. I
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155 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,19,0)
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156 | ;;=do not recall why for Hebrew we skipped ahead to ID Number 18, but I'm
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157 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,20,0)
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158 | ;;=sure there was a reason.
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159 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,21,0)
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160 | ;;=
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161 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,22,0)
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162 | ;;=Thereafter, languages are added in segments, in order by Name, starting
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163 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,23,0)
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164 | ;;=with ID Number 8. The segments correspond to the ISO 639 language
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165 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,24,0)
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166 | ;;=standards, in order (639-1 languages in segment two, 639-2 in three, and
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167 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,25,0)
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168 | ;;=so on). Each language has one unique record in this file, so wherever a
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169 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,26,0)
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170 | ;;=language in one segment has already been included in an earlier segment,
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171 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,27,0)
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172 | ;;=it is not included in the later segment (e.g., Greek was in segment one,
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173 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,28,0)
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174 | ;;=so it is not also added as a duplicate in segment two).
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175 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,29,0)
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176 | ;;=
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177 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,30,0)
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178 | ;;=This segmented approach makes it comparatively easy to upgrade the file
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179 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,23,31,0)
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180 | ;;=in discrete batches, to keep the update projects manageable.
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181 | ;;^DD(.85,.001,"DT")
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182 | ;;=3121031
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183 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,0)
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184 | ;;=NAME^RFJ60^^0;1^K:$L(X)>60!($L(X)<1) X
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185 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,.1)
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186 | ;;=Language-Name
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187 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,3)
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188 | ;;=Answer must be 1-60 characters in length.
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189 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,21,0)
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190 | ;;=^^10^10^3121031^
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191 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,21,1,0)
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192 | ;;=Enter the English name of the language, not the native name.
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193 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,21,2,0)
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194 | ;;=
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195 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,21,3,0)
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196 | ;;=The default is the English name from ISO 639, converted where necessary to
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197 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,21,4,0)
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198 | ;;=ASCII. Where the ISO 639 standards disagree (cf. "Central Khmer" in ISO
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199 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,21,5,0)
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200 | ;;=639-1 to "Khmer" in ISO 639-3), the most recent standard's spelling is
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201 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,21,6,0)
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202 | ;;=used.
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203 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,21,7,0)
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204 | ;;=
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205 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,21,8,0)
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206 | ;;=However, this use of ISO 639's spelling as a default is overridden in
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207 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,21,9,0)
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208 | ;;=several different ways to improve consistency across entries and to
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209 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,21,10,0)
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210 | ;;=reduce selection error.
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211 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,0)
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212 | ;;=^^63^63^3121031^
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213 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,1,0)
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214 | ;;=This is the English name of the language, not the native name. It
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215 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,2,0)
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216 | ;;=defaults to the English name from ISO 639, mixed case, converted where
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217 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,3,0)
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218 | ;;=necessary to ASCII. Where the ISO 639 standards disagree (cf. "Central
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219 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,4,0)
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220 | ;;=Khmer" in ISO 639-1 to "Khmer" in ISO 639-3), the most recent standard's
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221 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,5,0)
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222 | ;;=spelling is used.
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223 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,6,0)
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224 | ;;=
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225 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,7,0)
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226 | ;;=However, this use of ISO 639's spelling as a default is overridden in
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227 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,8,0)
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228 | ;;=several different ways to improve consistency across entries and to
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229 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,9,0)
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230 | ;;=reduce selection error.
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231 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,10,0)
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232 | ;;=
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233 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,11,0)
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234 | ;;=For example, for most modern languages, the form of the name that
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235 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,12,0)
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236 | ;;=includes the word "Modern" and the parenthesized dates is an alternate
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237 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,13,0)
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238 | ;;=name, but ISO 639 reverses that with Modern Greek. In this file, we
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239 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,14,0)
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240 | ;;=reassert the pattern by making the ISO 639 name "Greek, Modern (1453-)"
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241 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,15,0)
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242 | ;;=an alternate name and making the name "Greek" instead.
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243 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,16,0)
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244 | ;;=
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245 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,17,0)
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246 | ;;=Since most users of these systems are medical professionals rather than
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247 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,18,0)
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248 | ;;=linguists or historians, we emphasize modern languages and group
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249 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,19,0)
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250 | ;;=historical ones away from the modern names to reduce accidents. For
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251 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,20,0)
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252 | ;;=example, "French, Old (842-ca.1400)" as so named in ISO 639-2 is used as
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253 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,21,0)
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254 | ;;=an alternate name for "Old French" in this file, to move the obsolete
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255 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,22,0)
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256 | ;;=form of the language away from the modern one. Thus, "Old" languages,
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257 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,23,0)
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258 | ;;="Ancient" ones, and "Middle" ones will tend to sort together. However,
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259 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,24,0)
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260 | ;;=languages whose names look like historical ones, such as "Old Church
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261 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,25,0)
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262 | ;;=Slavonic", that are still living languages or in active liturgical use
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263 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,26,0)
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264 | ;;=are kept in this form if that is how they are best known.
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265 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,27,0)
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266 | ;;=
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267 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,28,0)
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268 | ;;=Also, such forms that include parenthetical dates are changed to remove
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269 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,29,0)
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270 | ;;=the dates and parentheses from the Name field; the original forms and
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271 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,30,0)
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272 | ;;=variants are preserved in the Alternate Name field.
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273 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,31,0)
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274 | ;;=
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275 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,32,0)
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276 | ;;=For similar reasons, language collections like "Banda languages" are
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277 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,33,0)
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278 | ;;=renamed as "Languages, Banda" to move them away from individual language
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279 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,34,0)
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280 | ;;=a patient might speak, like "Banda-Banda". The same was preserved from
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281 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,35,0)
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282 | ;;=ISO 639 with creoles and pidgins (such as "Creoles and Pidgins,
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283 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,36,0)
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284 | ;;=Portuguese-Based"), which are collective languages, to kepp them separate
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285 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,37,0)
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286 | ;;=from the individual languages they might be confused with (such as
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287 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,38,0)
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288 | ;;="Portuguese"). However, individual languages like "Haitian Creole" and
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289 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,39,0)
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290 | ;;="Chinook Jargon" whose ISO 639 names makes them sound like language
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291 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,40,0)
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292 | ;;=collections are nevertheless left as is, since these are the names they
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293 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,41,0)
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294 | ;;=are known by and since the distinguishing part of the name does come
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295 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,42,0)
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296 | ;;=first, allowing for unambiguous selection.
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297 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,43,0)
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298 | ;;=
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299 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,44,0)
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300 | ;;=Where the language name from ISO 639 is a list of alternative names, as
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301 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,45,0)
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302 | ;;=in "Catalan, Valencian", the dominant name (based on other code sets,
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303 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,46,0)
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304 | ;;=Ethnologue, Wikipedia, e.g. "Catalan") is used as the Name, with the
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305 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,47,0)
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306 | ;;=other name(s) (e.g., "Valencian") added to the Alternate Name field.
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307 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,48,0)
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308 | ;;=
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309 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,49,0)
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310 | ;;=As a general rule (except in the case of language collections), ISO 639
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311 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,50,0)
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312 | ;;=names that use commas to invert a language name (like "Sorbian, Upper")
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313 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,51,0)
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314 | ;;=are corrected (like "Upper Sorbian"), and the ISO 639 name is made an
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315 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,52,0)
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316 | ;;=Alternate Name. We do not try to use commas in the Name field to group
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317 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,53,0)
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318 | ;;=together all related languages or dialects, though we do in the Alternate
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319 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,54,0)
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320 | ;;=Name field.
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321 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,55,0)
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322 | ;;=
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323 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,56,0)
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324 | ;;=In the Name field, parenthetical comments are generally restricted to
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325 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,57,0)
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326 | ;;=distinguishing between unrelated languages that have the same name, like
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327 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,58,0)
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328 | ;;="Lele (Democratic Republic of Congo)" and "Lele (Papua New Guinea)". The
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329 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,59,0)
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330 | ;;=parenthetical words will be (in order of preference) a country, a people,
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331 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,60,0)
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332 | ;;=or an alternate name of the language, so long as it distinguishes it from
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333 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,61,0)
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334 | ;;=the other identically named languages. To date, we have not had to change
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335 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,62,0)
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336 | ;;=any of the ISO 639 names we've imported to make or correct these
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337 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,23,63,0)
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338 | ;;=distinctions, but we stand ready to do so to enforce this pattern.
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339 | ;;^DD(.85,.01,"DT")
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340 | ;;=3121031
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341 | ;;^DD(.85,.02,0)
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342 | ;;=TWO LETTER CODE^FJ2^^0;2^K:$L(X)>2!($L(X)<2) X
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343 | ;;^DD(.85,.02,3)
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344 | ;;=Answer must be 2 characters in length.
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345 | ;;^DD(.85,.02,21,0)
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346 | ;;=^^3^3^3121101^^
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347 | ;;^DD(.85,.02,21,1,0)
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348 | ;;=Enter the two-letter code defined for this language in the ISO 639-1
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349 | ;;^DD(.85,.02,21,2,0)
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350 | ;;=standard. Not every language has a two-letter code; for those that do not
|
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351 | ;;^DD(.85,.02,21,3,0)
|
---|
352 | ;;=leave this field blank.
|
---|
353 | ;;^DD(.85,.02,23,0)
|
---|
354 | ;;=^^1^1^3121101^
|
---|
355 | ;;^DD(.85,.02,23,1,0)
|
---|
356 | ;;=Future versions of this file wil include an optional key on this field.
|
---|
357 | ;;^DD(.85,.02,"DT")
|
---|
358 | ;;=3121101
|
---|
359 | ;;^DD(.85,.03,0)
|
---|
360 | ;;=THREE LETTER CODE^FJ3^^0;3^K:$L(X)>3!($L(X)<3) X
|
---|
361 | ;;^DD(.85,.03,3)
|
---|
362 | ;;=Answer must be 3 characters in length.
|
---|
363 | ;;^DD(.85,.03,21,0)
|
---|
364 | ;;=^^2^2^3121101^^^^
|
---|
365 | ;;^DD(.85,.03,21,1,0)
|
---|
366 | ;;=Enter the three-letter code defined for this language in the ISO 639-2/B
|
---|
367 | ;;^DD(.85,.03,21,2,0)
|
---|
368 | ;;=standard.
|
---|
369 | ;;^DD(.85,.03,23,0)
|
---|
370 | ;;=^^2^2^3121101^
|
---|
371 | ;;^DD(.85,.03,23,1,0)
|
---|
372 | ;;=When this file is upgraded to ISO-639-6, an optional key will be added to
|
---|
373 | ;;^DD(.85,.03,23,2,0)
|
---|
374 | ;;=this field.
|
---|
375 | ;;^DD(.85,.03,"DT")
|
---|
376 | ;;=3121101
|
---|
377 | ;;^DD(.85,.04,0)
|
---|
378 | ;;=FOUR LETTER CODE^FJ4^^0;4^K:$L(X)>4!($L(X)<4) X
|
---|
379 | ;;^DD(.85,.04,3)
|
---|
380 | ;;=Answer must be 4 characters in length.
|
---|
381 | ;;^DD(.85,.04,21,0)
|
---|
382 | ;;=^^1^1^3121101^^^
|
---|
383 | ;;^DD(.85,.04,21,1,0)
|
---|
384 | ;;=Enter the four letter code associated with the language in ISO-639-6.
|
---|
385 | ;;^DD(.85,.04,23,0)
|
---|
386 | ;;=^^3^3^3121101^
|
---|
387 | ;;^DD(.85,.04,23,1,0)
|
---|
388 | ;;=This field is currently not used in this version of the release (as of
|
---|
389 | ;;^DD(.85,.04,23,2,0)
|
---|
390 | ;;=Fileman V22.2). In a future version when this file is upgraded to
|
---|
391 | ;;^DD(.85,.04,23,3,0)
|
---|
392 | ;;=ISO-639-6, a key will be added to this field.
|
---|
393 | ;;^DD(.85,.04,"DT")
|
---|
394 | ;;=3121101
|
---|
395 | ;;^DD(.85,.05,0)
|
---|
396 | ;;=ALTERNATE THREE LETTER CODE^FJ3^^0;5^K:$L(X)>3!($L(X)<3) X
|
---|
397 | ;;^DD(.85,.05,3)
|
---|
398 | ;;=Answer must be 3 characters in length.
|
---|
399 | ;;^DD(.85,.05,21,0)
|
---|
400 | ;;=^^4^4^3121101^
|
---|
401 | ;;^DD(.85,.05,21,1,0)
|
---|
402 | ;;=This is the alternate three letter code for a language. This will only be
|
---|
403 | ;;^DD(.85,.05,21,2,0)
|
---|
404 | ;;=used in cases where the language abbreviation is different in English
|
---|
405 | ;;^DD(.85,.05,21,3,0)
|
---|
406 | ;;=than in the native language. E.g. GER instead of DEU; for German instead
|
---|
407 | ;;^DD(.85,.05,21,4,0)
|
---|
408 | ;;=of Deutsch. This alternate abbreviation can be found in ISO 639-2/B.
|
---|
409 | ;;^DD(.85,.05,23,0)
|
---|
410 | ;;=^^1^1^3121101^
|
---|
411 | ;;^DD(.85,.05,23,1,0)
|
---|
412 | ;;=In a future version of Fileman, this field will have an optional key.
|
---|