In some countries they drive on the left side of the road, and yet they call it the right side to drive on. In some countries they read (and good for them they write also) from right to left and say they read what they have written in the right direction. You cannot expect people to agree on such a trivial matter as little or big endian. What would be the big end? the right? No the little end is the right one too ;-)
@iArnold and @HostileFork Numeric keyboard layout on computers vs telephones, ASCII vs EBCDIC, record separators, and so on and so on... we live in the richest world of all possible worlds. Let's enjoy it!
@HostileFork Interesting indeed. This is the finetuning category, beyond the point where I was thinking about. Satisfying conversion (and any encoding) isn't always possible without a few hints about size and representation. One of my first lessons at university was that 1.5 is not the same as 1.5000.
Oh, and here is #8. I don't expect this belongs to common programming practice, I just mention it for the record of this aspect:
8. Crypto-morphological fit (more obscure data structures like IEEE-754, Little Endian vs Big Endian etc.).
@WiseGenius no! It just made me smile :) It reminded me of trying to program games on ZX Spectrum basic as a child and wondering why it didn't perform very well ...