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00:01
@roganjosh You can visually find the difference by just lining up the regexes under each other:
pub static FLOAT_RE: Lazy<Regex> = Lazy::new(|| {
    Regex::new(r"^[-+]?((\d*\.\d+)([eE][-+]?\d+)?|inf|NaN|(\d+)[eE][-+]?\d+|\d+\.)$").unwrap()
                            ^^
    Regex::new(r"^[-+]?((\d*,\d+)([eE][-+]?\d+)?|inf|NaN|(\d+)[eE][-+]?\d+|\d+,)$").unwrap()
                            ^
pub static FLOAT_RE_DECIMAL: Lazy<Regex> = Lazy::new(|| {
FLOAT_RE requires a decimal point \.
FLOAT_RE_DECIMAL doesn't seem to allow a decimal point. But it allows a comma (thousands separator) in the leading digits.
@Hakaishin That's not really actionable. I read Honnibal's point as any open-source package in a fast-moving area cannot function as a voluntary committee where people contribute their favorite stuff, it also needs some level of benevolent dictator doing purging, culling, refactoring, deprecation at every version, in particular every major version.
If a package doesn't have people enforcing that (and many don't), then a package becomes unstructured, acquires cruft, confusion.
@roganjosh Ok sorry, comma as decimal separator as Andras said (not thousands separator).
 
5 hours later…
05:34
The nice thing is that, after Andras pointed it out, I can actually see the difference properly and regex suddenly looks a lot less intimidating to me. Perhaps I won't be utterly helpless with patterns any longer
 
3 hours later…
08:12
@smci Once I was running it with django and once as a standalone package
@smci Well you just formulated some actionable things, so I don't see the problem
@smci Yeah, honestly maintaining software is at least as much about deleting things as it is about creating things

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