That story makes no sense, if you want to order 98 of something you’d write 98, not 98,000 or 98.000, no matter what decimal separater you prefer, especially for something where ordering a fraction makes no sense.
But I never put commas or points into the contract?”
Either he put 98000, or he wrote 98 and some spreadsheet autoformatter changed it to 98.000 and he never noticed because he’s not supposed to be a competent character.
In the end I just took it as a fun story, but I get finding something unrealistic, it not passing your willing suspension of disbelief, and pulling you out of the story and making it hard to enjoy.
That story makes no sense, if you want to order 98 of something you’d write 98, not 98,000 or 98.000, no matter what decimal separater you prefer, especially for something where ordering a fraction makes no sense.
Either he put 98000, or he wrote 98 and some spreadsheet autoformatter changed it to 98.000 and he never noticed because he’s not supposed to be a competent character.
In the end I just took it as a fun story, but I get finding something unrealistic, it not passing your willing suspension of disbelief, and pulling you out of the story and making it hard to enjoy.
And that’s why cheques and contracts also express critical numbers in words.
We write that like this: 98,- but usually in financial contexts/money. You see this used in stores to indicate rounded prices, too.