There were some notable changes to the CLDR JSON format and data in this
release.
The patterns for a date at a specific time, i.e. "{date} at {time}", now
appear under the "atTime" attribute of the "dateTimeFormats" object.
Locale specific changes that affected test-js:
All locales:
* In many patterns, the code points U+00A0 (NO-BREAK SPACE) and U+202F
(NARROW NO-BREAK SPACE) are now used in place of an ASCII space. For
example, before the "dayPeriod" fields AM and PM.
* Separators such as U+2013 (EN DASH) are now surrounded by U+2009 (THIN
SPACE) in place of an ASCII space character.
Locale "en":
* Narrow localizations of time formats are even more narrow. For
example, the abbreviation "wk." for "week" is now just "wk".
Locale "ar":
* The code point U+060C (ARABIC COMMA) is now used in place of an ASCII
comma.
* The code point U+200F (RIGHT-TO-LEFT MARK) now appears at the
beginning of many localizations.
* When the "latn" numbering system is used for currency formatting, the
currency symbol more consistently is placed at the end of the pattern.
Locale "he":
* The "many" plural rules category has been removed.
Locales "zh" and "es-419":
* Several display-name localizations were changed.
This is a normative change in the ECMA-262 spec. See:
35b7eb2
Note there is a bit of weirdness between the mainline spec and the set
notation proposal as the latter has not been updated with this change.
For now, this implements what the spec PR and other prototypes indicate
how the proposal will behave.
Although this already works in most cases in non-kvm serenity cases the
cosh and other math function tend to return incorrect values for
Infinity. This makes sure that whatever the underlying cosh function
returns Math.cosh conforms to the spec.
We use strtod to convert a string to number after checking whether the
string is [+-]Infinity, however strtod also checks for either 'inf' or
'infinity' in a case-insensitive.
There are still valid cases for strtod to return infinity like 10e100000
so we just check if the "number" contains 'i' or 'I' in which case
the strtod infinity is not valid.
Assuming we had at least one argument meant that the ...arg count would
underflow causing the bound function to have length 0 instead of the
given length when binding with no arguments.
This isn't called out in TR-35, but before ICU even looks at CLDR data,
it adds a hard-coded set of default patterns to each locale's calendar.
It has done this since 2006 when its DateTimeFormat feature was first
created. Several test262 tests depend on this, which under ECMA-402,
falls into "implementation defined" behavior. For compatibility, we
can do the same in LibUnicode.
Commit ec7d535 only partially handled the case of flexible day periods
rolling over midnight, in that it only worked for hours after midnight.
For example, the en locale defines a day period range of [21:00, 06:00).
The previous method of adding 24 hours to the given hour would change
e.g. 23:00 to 47:00, which isn't valid.