T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1047.1 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | Pardon me? Or must I be a criminal? | Tue Jun 01 1993 19:13 | 7 |
| >Her response was "Oh! I'd be terrified to write anything in a
>conference like that; everyone would pick apart what I write."
Did she really respond with two spaces after the semicolon?
Every respondent should know that there should be two spaces
after each sentence, and two spaces after each colon, but
not after a semicolon.
|
1047.2 | | NOVA::FISHER | DEC Rdb/Dinosaur | Wed Jun 02 1993 06:19 | 4 |
| Or did the author of .0 misquote her "." as a ";" and then correctly
quote her two spaces?
ed
|
1047.3 | picky picky | RAGMOP::T_PARMENTER | The cake of liberty | Wed Jun 02 1993 06:48 | 3 |
| Ah, yes, but those two spaces following the period (and colon) are just
a convention of monospaced typing and have nothing to do with either the
language or its printed representation in proportional type.
|
1047.4 | mistakes | FORTY2::KNOWLES | DECspell snot awl ewe kneed | Wed Jun 02 1993 06:58 | 20 |
| Re last 2
On the subject of misquoting things not written, it's interesting
that the intonation of reported speech is seldom accurate. Say
`Where are you going?' and "`Where are you going?' she asked" and
you'll see what I mean: in each case the normal intonation is
broadly U-shaped, with a peak at the end, but in the second case
there's a secondary peak - not as high as the one at the end of
the utterance - at the end of the quoted question.
Re .0
Let us draw a veil over the presciptive/descriptive debate, which
has raged elsewhere, gentle reader. It's true enough to observe
that people's tendency to make mistakes is an engine for change in
a language. I'd be surprised if anyone could reasonably argue
that that's a good enough reason for making mistakes - although
we may argue about when a mistake is common enough to be recognized
as acceptable in whatever the standard language is.
b
|
1047.5 | It don't matter to me | KALE::ROBERTS | | Wed Jun 02 1993 08:48 | 19 |
| re .-1
No, I didn't mean to imply that I advocate mistakes. And perhaps you
didn't mean to imply that I did.
But I've been thinking, too, about what to do when you hear one. Do
you correct the mistake? I don't, simply because I think it's quite a
rude thing to do. (Unless the person prides himself/herself on this
sort of thing, in which case I consider any statements fair game...)
I think of language as a game we all play, some of us using looser rules
than others. And playing by stricter rules is a choice I make in some
instances, mostly because I derive pleasure from the preciseness.
But correcting someone's grammar, or choice of words, or whatever,
is insulting, I think, because the message given to the person
corrected is that the words were more important than the content.
|
1047.6 | But be careful of copyrights | GAVEL::PCLX31::satow | gavel::satow or @mso | Wed Jun 02 1993 10:21 | 33 |
| re: .0
> Her response started me thinking about this, and also about why some of
> us care about language and others don't, and also, why using language
> "improperly" is a social stigma of a sort.
Hey! You've got a great idea for a play or novel. One character could be a
stuffy professor, with a name like, say "Henry Higgins". Another character
could be some semiliterate guttersnipe named, say, "Eliza Doolittle".
"Henry" could teach "Eliza" to say some simple phrase, like "The rain in
Spain stays mainly in the plain" properly, and convince everyone that she is
a princess of some sort.
> But correcting someone's grammar, or choice of words, or whatever,
> is insulting, I think, because the message given to the person
> corrected is that the words were more important than the content.
I think another reason is that correct use of grammar is often used as an
indicator or intelligence, and, particularly in periods of history in which
only a few were educated, social status (one of the themes of Pygmalion).
I absolutely agree that it is (at least perceived to be) insulting to
correct someone's grammar. That's why I like this Notesfile. I can come
in here and complain -- to an understanding, and sometimes sympathetic
audience -- about things that bother me, like misuses of apostrophe's, and
not fear insulting anyone. Or I can engage in some parrying on word usage or
grammar, and it can result in some intellectual stimulation rather than
personal attack.
Clay
|
1047.7 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | Escapes,Lies,Truth,Passion,Miracles | Wed Jun 02 1993 11:36 | 5 |
| The only times I've corrected another's grammar, usage, or spelling,
it's been with a fellow word-weenie. Said word-weenie understood the
context, and called me appropriate names.
andrew
|
1047.8 | Word Weenies | KALE::ROBERTS | | Wed Jun 02 1993 12:00 | 14 |
| re .-1
Yeah; I agree. With word weenies it's fun. Although I guess it would
be annoying to be actually trying to get a point across and have a word
weenie stop and correct my grammar. Stops the flow of conversation,
you know.
Which reminds me of a guy I used to work with, who was not what I'd
call a "word weenie" but who used to enjoy doing things like, having
ordered a steak in a restaurant, saying "Yes" when a waiter would ask
"How would you like that cooked?" He got some sort of wierd pleasure
out of this sort of thing.
-ellie
|
1047.9 | | CALS::DESELMS | Help is only a half-step away. | Wed Jun 02 1993 12:52 | 5 |
| Re: -1
He just sounds like a general weenie instead of a word weenie.
- Jim
|
1047.10 | A weenie Indeed | INGOT::ROBERTS | | Wed Jun 02 1993 13:15 | 5 |
| re .-1
8^)))
You are sooooooooooo right!
|
1047.11 | Or another anatomical part. | NWD002::ANDERSON_MI | Dwell in possibility | Wed Jun 02 1993 17:40 | 1 |
|
|
1047.12 | A propos: what's the difference between a weenie and a dweeb | FORTY2::KNOWLES | DECspell snot awl ewe kneed | Thu Jun 03 1993 06:50 | 11 |
| � No, I didn't mean to imply that I advocate mistakes. And perhaps you
� didn't mean to imply that I did.
Nope. When I wrote `I don't think anyone...' (or some such) I was
trying to generalize; sorry if it came across as a personal gibe. I see
now that the `we may argue...' may have read as a `you and I' sort of
WE rather than a more general one that referred to JOYOFLEXERs and
their ilk. Maybe I'd've been clearer writing Russian (which has an
exclusive and an inclusive WE, I'm told); but I can't.
b
|
1047.13 | | STARCH::HAGERMAN | Flames to /dev/null | Thu Jun 03 1993 09:29 | 20 |
| What I find frustrating is when people who SHOULD know "the rules"
don't. For example, in this morning's Globe there was a story
containing a sentence with potentially garbled tenses. It caught me
and I puzzled over it for one grapefruit's worth of time, trying to
figure out whether the sentence was correct (and the implied time
difference was as reported) or the writer had simply screwed up.
When reading comments in someone's code, grammar errors only
cast doubt on the education and nit-pickyness of the programmer
(and by implication, on the quality of the code), but errors in
articles written by professional authors are very difficult to
justify.
Yes, the language changes over time. Yes, "alot" shows up alot.
But the standard rules for spelling and grammar are well established,
and those who profess to make a living as writers should be
expected to adhere to those rules.
Doug.
|
1047.14 | | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Not so genteel as real gentlemen | Thu Jun 03 1993 10:35 | 6 |
| > But the standard rules for spelling and grammar are well established,
To really read correctly, the reader shouldn't be distracted by
what they're reading about.
Ray
|
1047.15 | Today I *Are* One... | INGOT::ROBERTS | | Thu Jun 03 1993 10:44 | 18 |
| re .13
Yes, you are so right! There is "alot" of fuzzy writing out
there, and the worst sin, I think, is writing so poorly that the
reader has to just take a guess at what on earth it all means. And
when this sort of drivel comes from the pen (or keyboard) of a
professional, it makes me wonder what the hell is going on.
I long ago gave up on thinking that programmers should be able to
write clearly though. Depressing, isn't it? If they can't write
logically in English, (or whatever their native language is), how
can they write logically in C, or MACRO, or <insert language of your
choice>?? My answer is that many can't, and don't. Before I became
a software engineer, I spent several years working as a technical writer,
and generally did not gain a very high opinion of programmers from
that vantage point....
-ellie
|
1047.16 | Old Ambrose | RAGMOP::T_PARMENTER | The cake of liberty | Thu Jun 03 1993 11:16 | 12 |
| A smooth flow and successful expression of thought are what we hope to
achieve when we write, thus, at one time or another, I may say:
I am homeless.
I have no home.
No home have I.
I ain't got no home.
In most formal situations, formal language is required, but it is
namby-pamby to write, as I saw in the Wall Street Journal the other
day, "You have to beat them or join them." In this case, correct usage
is "You have to beat 'em or join 'em."
|
1047.17 | Bad may be worse than awful | GAVEL::PCLX31::satow | gavel::satow or @mso | Thu Jun 03 1993 11:30 | 27 |
| re: .15
A couple of mild disagreements:
> [T]he worst sin, I think, is writing so poorly that the
> reader has to just take a guess at what on earth it all means.
In the context of professional writing (especially technical writing) I think
the worst sin is to write just poorly enough that the readier THINKS s/he
knows what it means, but doesn't. If writing is so poor that the reader
KNOWS that s/he doesn't know what it means, s/he might be motivated to find
out the correct information from some other source.
> If they [programmers] can't write logically in English, (or whatever
> their native language is), how can they write logically in C, or MACRO,
> or <insert language of your choice>?? My answer is that many can't,
> and don't.
One major way that programming differs from English and other human languages
is that usually if you make a spelling or syntax or grammar error in a
programming language, you get an error message. The computer doesn't
understand you, and will tell you so. Not so with human languages; a human
will normally draw a conclusion as to what you meant, but won't tell you, for
fear of being considered rude, or a word weenie.
Clay
|
1047.18 | Can Ewe Right in See? | INGOT::ROBERTS | | Fri Jun 04 1993 06:24 | 11 |
| Re .-1
Yes; leading the reader astray is worse than losing him or her
completely.
What you say about computer languages is, of course, true. But after
years (decades) of debugging my own and other people's code I tend to
think that, in matters of sensible writing, the compiler is about as
useful as a spell checker...
-ellie
|
1047.19 | | NOVA::FISHER | DEC Rdb/Dinosaur | Fri Jun 04 1993 14:21 | 20 |
| Here's is a problem which has been bothering me.
My wife felt she was treated poorly at a dentist's office and
when it came time to make another appointment, she called and told
the dentist her reasons for changing dentists. A few days later
she got some flowers from him with a note "Your absolutely right."
Probably the note was written by someone at the flower shop. I do
business with that flower shop and as far as flowers are concerned
they do a good job. I do think that doing a poor job of writing notes
does make their business look a little less professional.
If the note had been written by the dentist, I'd add one more reason
for changing.
Would you hold a "professional" to higher standards of language?
If I picked on some engineers specs for the poor language, I think
they would "take me to Personnel."
ed
|
1047.20 | Words are a product.... | INGOT::ROBERTS | | Mon Jun 07 1993 10:41 | 9 |
| re .19
If the flower shop is in the business of providing notes to go with
their bouquets, then these notes are as much a part of their product as
the flowers are. Providing an incorrectly spelled or worded note is
just as bad as providing wilted flowers.....
-ellie
|
1047.21 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Jun 07 1993 10:50 | 6 |
| > If the note had been written by the dentist, I'd add one more reason
> for changing.
To think that I've been going to a dentist whose writing ability is totally
unknown to me! I'm going to insist that he submit a writing sample before
my next checkup.
|
1047.22 | | RAGMOP::T_PARMENTER | The cake of liberty | Mon Jun 07 1993 11:02 | 2 |
| My dentist is an excellent dancer!
|
1047.23 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Jun 07 1993 11:12 | 1 |
| Sounds like a movie... "Dances with Dentists."
|
1047.24 | | MU::PORTER | pledge week - send me some money | Mon Jun 07 1993 16:56 | 11 |
| This is only slightly related to this note, but I was
dismayed to notice that a few announcers on the radio
station to which I listen (the one that's asking for
money this week, again) think that the 23rd letter
of the alphabet is "dubber-ya". They say this whilst
explaining how they're the station of choice for intelligent
listeners.
Maybe I should offer to make them a pledge if they can
only refrain from saying "dubber-ya" for a whole hour?
|
1047.25 | 8^) | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Tue Jun 08 1993 07:34 | 10 |
|
>> Maybe I should offer to make them a pledge if they can
>> only refrain from saying "dubber-ya" for a whole hour?
Yeah, after all, everybody knows it's "dubba-yoo".
|
1047.26 | | GAVEL::PCLX31::satow | gavel::satow or @mso | Tue Jun 08 1993 07:58 | 7 |
| > Yeah, after all, everybody knows it's "dubba-yoo".
An interesting variant is "yoo-dub" which some use to refer to the University
of Washington.
Clay
|
1047.27 | From the Latin, "vava vavum" | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Not so genteel as real gentlemen | Tue Jun 08 1993 12:56 | 3 |
| Isn't it properly pronounced "va-va"?
Ray
|
1047.28 | Alter-ego | KERNEL::MORRIS | Which universe did you dial? | Wed Jun 09 1993 04:38 | 15 |
| re .17
> One major way that programming differs from English and other human
> languages is that usually if you make a spelling or syntax or
> grammar error in a programming language, you get an error message.
> The computer doesn't understand you, and will tell you so. Not so
> with human languages; a human will normally draw a conclusion as
> to what you meant, but won't tell you, for fear of being
> considered rude, or a word weenie.
Does this mean that I am an error message not a word weenie?
:o)
Jon
|
1047.29 | YACC | KALE::ROBERTS | | Wed Jun 09 1993 06:27 | 5 |
| re .28
It must mean that you are a compiler! 8^)
-e
|
1047.30 | tfe | VANINE::LOVELL | � l'eau; c'est l'heure | Wed Jun 09 1993 06:41 | 12 |
| Or possibly just a "tight front-end". :-)
I can't remember which language compiler it was back on a V2 VMS
system I worked on but it could be configured to optionally
balk at, or do its best to parse, certain language syntax
constructs which for historic reasons had worked, but were no longer
officially supported.
I think the command line was something like ;
/SYNTAX=TIGHT (D)
RELAXED
|
1047.31 | It's not only a compilers privilege to be strict ... | HLDE01::STEENWINKEL | Any answer must be a subset of 42 | Wed Jun 09 1993 07:05 | 12 |
| I read once that some Fortran compiler would parse INTERGER without
generating a syntax error; apparently it was easier to change the
compiler than the programmers' spelling behaviour.
From the same source it was mentioned one programmer complaining
that if he declared two variables, the compiler should not object to
the syntax VAR X,Y INTEGERS; :-) .... (don't know if this was the exact
statement as it was probably Fortran again; the above line is Pascal)
- Rik -
|
1047.32 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Wed Jun 09 1993 09:48 | 7 |
| In the days of cards and line printers, when an edit, compile,
link, run sequence would take a day there was a lot of advantage in "do
what I mean" compilers that would allow you to get a run in spite of a
syntax error. A simple typo wouldn't neccessarily delay a project by a
day. Back in the days before minicomputers and C were invented there
was a lot of interest in this sort of thing. It seems to be rather an
obselete technology now.
|
1047.33 | A case of: That's all I need for now | RICKS::PHIPPS | | Wed Jun 09 1993 10:14 | 16 |
| > I read once that some Fortran compiler would parse INTERGER without
> generating a syntax error; apparently it was easier to change the
> compiler than the programmers' spelling behaviour.
It looks like the compiler would take the first four unique
characters to make a command match.
DCL does that too on some commands. Depends on what .EXE file gets
started. I can type:
$ ASSIBOFARBUM DUA1 NAME$
and have a logical NAME$ ASSIgned to DUA1. Nothing checks after the
first four.
mP
|
1047.34 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Wed Jun 09 1993 10:39 | 3 |
| Don't rely on DCL behaviour remaining unchanged. Unless we are all
forced to ls and grep or use a mouse you may find you need more than
four characters... You have been warned!
|
1047.35 | Good! I'm glad! | RICKS::PHIPPS | | Wed Jun 09 1993 19:19 | 1 |
| But it has been that way for as long as I can remember ;^)
|