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Mail Archives: djgpp/1998/01/26/06:17:04

From: G DOT DegliEsposti AT ads DOT it
To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com
Message-ID: <C1256598.003D15BE.00@vega.ads.it>
Date: Mon, 26 Jan 1998 12:16:10 +0100
Subject: Re: OFF TOPIC: Re: foo
Mime-Version: 1.0




>>Exactly correct.  "Foo," along with "bar" and sometimes "baz," is a
>>placeholder used in examples.  When I say, "type 'gcc -o foo.exe
>>foo.c'," I mean that you should substitute "foo" in the example with
>>whatever your real-world program is named.
>>
>Poser: Does there exist a universal, as in non-English-specific,
>placeholder?

I don't think so... I think each country has its own... of course we all
mainly use the american ones as long as we speak American English...

>I have used foo, bar and baz all my (programming) life and it
>never occurred to me, being the American English centric chump I am, that
>someone non-American would have a problem understanding these conventions.
Well, my experience is this: at first it was quite difficult to understand
their meaning, but it was like "afaik", "imho" or "rtfm", they were just
some
words used conventionally for a particular meaning. It was not important
what the acronym was.

Of course I find it strange to use these placeholders, but for me it is
also
strange to *write in English*! :-)

>I intuited immediately in my first Fortran class in (gasp) 1979 (ahh, the
>good ole days of punchcards and greenbar...) what foo, bar and baz meant.

What if I send you a sample of italian placeholders? :-)

ciao
  Giacomo



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