Come on, every bank statement of yours will tell you the ISO code of the currency your account is in, you will probably find it on every magazine that you read and so on and so on. Please don't tell me that this is such an academic thing...
This is completely untrue in England too. I have two bank accounts with two different large high street banks and have just spent five minutes looking at statements from them both. There is definitely no ISO code. I have also tried two newspapers, a utility bill, half a dozen invoices and I am none the wiser. If I was given an hour to find it offline I think I would fail (and I still have no clue what it is). I guess Google or Wikipedia would work but I have never heard of an ISO code for currency even though I have traveled to 48 countries etc etc...
On Mon, Nov 3, 2008 at 11:34 PM, Mark Wagner carnildo@gmail.com wrote:
On Sat, Nov 1, 2008 at 08:47, Michael Bimmler mbimmler@gmail.com wrote:
On Sat, Nov 1, 2008 at 3:21 PM, Steve Summit scs@eskimo.com wrote:
- who knows the 3-character ISO code for the currency he uses
Come on, every bank statement of yours will tell you the ISO code of the currency your account is in, you will probably find it on every magazine that you read and so on and so on. Please don't tell me that this is such an academic thing...
Maybe where you live. In my country, the only symbol commonly used to indicate quantities of currency is "$".
-- Mark Wagner
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