Originally posted by suityou01
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If that's how you write, how's your code?
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Originally posted by mudskipper View PostAh, you're one of those people who goes to blood doning sessions too, aren't you?
Give up before you make a tit out of yourself
Knock first as I might be balancing my chakras.Comment
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Normally tea, though it might be water.Originally posted by Ignis Fatuus View PostIf you are pouring over a document, what are you pouring?
It's only something I've really come across since this internet thingy came along.
BI (Before Internet) we had secretaries wot could spell.Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.Comment
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Orientate is in my Concise Oxford Dictionary. Try looking it up.Originally posted by suityou01 View PostOrientated instead of oriented is another one.Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.Comment
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Are you sure?Originally posted by suityou01 View PostAhem, bollocks.
No such verb 'to orientate'
HTH
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Although I haven't come across any dictionary entry that says so, my own observations suggest that the Yanks prefer the short form.Originally posted by mudskipper View PostAhem, the correct English word is orientated.Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.Comment
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It's the spell checkers - if it's not red people assume it's fine hen you're / yours and all the mistakes that are otherwise valid English words in another context.
Unfortunately same goes for coding - you can write a perfectly valid and executable code that will compile or interpret just fine, but it won't do what it's supposed to.
For all of the above reasons I tend code in as high level langauge as possible.
For communicating with humans, unfortunately I have to use English, which is not easy to parse and does not have a strict mode therefore I use a moderately plain variant of it to try and get as much across as possible...Comment
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Yep, I think that's right. The Yanks say "oriented" (and so do I most times - it's clearly crept into my usage at some point, probably from all that talk of object-oriented programming). But the formal British English appears to be "orientated".Originally posted by Sysman View PostAlthough I haven't come across any dictionary entry that says so, my own observations suggest that the Yanks prefer the short form.Comment
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