https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=114588
Eric Gallager <egallager at gcc dot gnu.org> changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- CC| |egallager at gcc dot gnu.org --- Comment #2 from Eric Gallager <egallager at gcc dot gnu.org> --- (In reply to Andrew Pinski from comment #1) > Confirmed. I should note that Red/Green is the opposite meaning in some > places than western cultures. That is Red is good and Green is bad. Most of > China is where that is true. > > See > https://graphicdesign.stackexchange.com/questions/6982/except-china-which- > country-will-use-red-for-up-and-green-for-down also. Japan, too, it's why the 📈 (chart with upwards trend) emoji uses red, and the 📉 (chart with downwards trend) emoji uses blue, because they were originally from Japan. Red = "heating up" (which is good for shares of a stock) and blue = "cooling off" (which is bad for shares of a stock)