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For German, @ is replaced with en. I am a native speaker, and I have never heard of read this “en”. Where does it come from? It is mostly called “at” in German (as in English). Other Geman words for it are very long.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Sorry it took me so long to reply. I'm not sure now (it was long time ago). I believe I took it from Python library having similar functionality.
Is it worth it to replace it now? It could potentially break some existing German users tests.
For German,
@
is replaced withen
. I am a native speaker, and I have never heard of read this “en”. Where does it come from? It is mostly called “at” in German (as in English). Other Geman words for it are very long.The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: