Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!csd4.milw.wisc.edu!dogie.macc.wisc.edu!uwvax!umn-d-ub!umn-cs!ns!ddb From: ddb@ns.network.com (David Dyer-Bennet) Newsgroups: comp.lang.c Subject: Re: Just Wondering Message-ID: <1318@ns.network.com> Date: 24 Apr 89 21:27:50 GMT References: <17037@mimsy.UUCP> <12481@lanl.gov> <621@marob.MASA.COM> Reply-To: ddb@ns.UUCP (David Dyer-Bennet) Distribution: na Organization: Terrabit Software Lines: 29 In article <621@marob.MASA.COM> cowan@marob.masa.com (John Cowan) writes: :Well, sometimes. DEC is a computer company, but "Dec" is an abbreviation :for December (credit: >Programming Pearls<); I see Dec and dec for the computer company all the time. And I generally use and often see DEC for the month. The context provides more clues than the casing does. :"Billy" and "BillY" are probably distinct e-mail names. Probably, but this is outside the range of normal English usage and back into computer conventions. :NASA would look pretty odd as nasa, too. I see the lower-case version on the net all the time, and it's never confused me or even slowed me down. In this case, there isn't another common term that differs only in the formally-correct casing, so there's no ambiguity to resolve. I continue to believe that a trained English reader is essentially a monocase device. The casing rules that exist mostly don't serve to disambiguate otherwise identical terms, and when they do they are mostly not followed; yet people can read the stuff anyway. -- David Dyer-Bennet, ddb@terrabit.fidonet.org, or ddb@ns.network.com or ddb@Lynx.MN.Org, ...{amdahl,hpda}!bungia!viper!ddb or ...!{rutgers!dayton | amdahl!ems | uunet!rosevax}!umn-cs!ns!ddb or Fidonet 1:282/341.0, (612) 721-8967 9600hst/2400/1200/300