This is a normative change in the Intl.NumberFormat V3 spec. See:
08f599b
Note that this didn't seem to actually affect our implementation. The
Unicode spec states:
https://www.unicode.org/reports/tr35/tr35-53/tr35-numbers.html#Plural_Ranges
"If there is no value for a <start,end> pair, the default result is end"
Therefore, our implementation did not have the behavior noted by the
issue this normative change addressed:
const pr = new Intl.PluralRules("en-US");
pr.selectRange(1, 1); // Is "other", should be "one"
Our implementation already returned "one" here because there is no such
<start=one, end=one> value in the CLDR for en-US. Thus, we already
returned the end value of "one".
This is a normative change in the Intl.NumberFormat V3 spec. See:
29acfc6
This is to allow Intl.PluralRules to use these options, as they were in-
effect required by later AOs anyways.
Explicitly disallow constructing a CanonicalIndex from a floating point
type without going through a factory method that will throw when the
provided index cannot fit in a u32.
Before these tests could be flaky if they happened to be called around
the edge of a second. Now we try up to 5 times to execute the tests
while staying within the same second.
We were mistakenly trying to append UTF-16 code units to a StringBuilder
via the append(char) API. This patch fixes that by accumulating the
result in a Vector<u16> instead.
This'll be a bit worse for performance, since we're now doing additional
UTF-16 string conversions, but we're going for correctness at this stage
and can worry about performance later.
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.