[12:12:21] 2461 [12:14:23] Hi everyone, I started translating labels to Turkish. However, when translating, I see two different options: Turkish and Türkçe. Why are the two separate? [12:16:05] they should be the same; that it appears twice seems like a bug (re @caneroz22: Hi everyone, I started translating labels to Turkish. However, when translating, I see two different options: Turkish and Türkçe...) [12:16:59] Oh okay [12:46:48] Are Wikimedia servers currently ECH-enabled? [13:04:26] You can create a task on phab (re @caneroz22: Hi everyone, I started translating labels to Turkish. However, when translating, I see two different options: Turkish and Türkçe...) [16:08:39] Open a task on Phabricator, then send it to me, so I'll relay it to the team, maybe it's fixable in a few days (re @caneroz22: Hi everyone, I started translating labels to Turkish. However, when translating, I see two different options: Turkish and Türkçe...) [16:13:26] Thanks all, I solved [16:13:45] Great! [17:59:29] https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T205378 (re @cvictorovich: Are Wikimedia servers currently ECH-enabled?) [21:08:07] I would assume there are many not-base-10 systems in everyday use in many current languages (even in German and English, you can still talk about [n] dozen!); question is whether these have *written* numbers (sticking to the example, there is no character for base-twelve equivalents of 10 and 11 afaic, only words) (re @vrandecic: Even if there were no current use of other base [21:08:08] s but ten, we do have different numeral digits to support, for Chinese, Arabic, e...) [21:16:11] there are various characters, but they're not very widely used. ↊ (U+218A) and ↋ (U+218B) is one pair I know of [21:22:57] time, imperial measurements, coordinates, roman numerals, tally marks and things like hex colour codes are various other things that come to mind that aren't base 10 too (although the first three still use normal digits)