@AndrewGrimm You may be right on the space - it was long time ago but I am sure bin meant son of (like mac) and pretty sure the family name came first. (This chat began on the point that use of first/last names is confusing after all)
Outstanding Bounty for question: "The difference between “follow” using についていく、「あと?」をつける、「あと?」をついていく". I need to award this but although I have two very extensive answers, the q is too difficult for me choose (and it was an interactive discussion). The fairest way to allow the final award is ask others more expert than me to vote on the answer they think most useful for future use. If you have a moment today please take a look.
I try not to ask questions on the main site about obscure grammar patterns my workbook tells me that are important, because I'd be asking a question every 10 minutes, but I'm making an exception
@jkerian I guess you can treat it like you treat votes on meta. "This was useful" or "this was not useful" (though I don't really see downvoting on resource questions)
sawa has just joined skeptics stack exchange. If I played a role in that, that's be the second site I played a role in (the other being travel stack exchange)
Oh, just found that message mentioning me being awol. I don't know why it didn't pop into my global inbox? As a programmer I visit stackoverflow.com almost every hour. IIRC, there was a somewhat complex rule about @mention behavior in chat rooms.
I think it only pings you if you've been there for the last few days, but then there are some exceptions if you've been involved in an on-site comment conversation recently... or are intentionally 'ping'd into chat
Is there a colloquial way that people would label their family members in their address book (like on this iPhone)? Or is it pretty straightforward? X伯母さん for Aunt X?
I'm writing a program and need to know how dates, versions, time, and numbers are formatted in the Japanese Language
Example (in English)
Version 1.0.0 (Build 0)
How would that look in Japan?
It seems like it is... but if you know what you're doing with that type of work, the answer is: "But your L10N library should handle most of this for you. If it doesn't, find another." as mentioned in the comment
c) seems to me that his main question is about version numbers which is of none but his own concern and I don't see why language would factor in at all.
I'm writing a program and need to know how dates, versions, time, and numbers are formatted in the Japanese Language
Example (in English)
Version 1.0.0 (Build 0)
How would that look in Japan?