Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!uflorida!novavax!twwells!bill From: bill@twwells.uucp (T. William Wells) Newsgroups: comp.lang.c Subject: Re: case sensitivity Message-ID: <884@twwells.uucp> Date: 29 Apr 89 01:09:41 GMT References: <13159@dartvax.Dartmouth.EDU> <1989Apr21.194615.5344@utzoo.uucp> <1320@ns.network.com> <871@twwells.uucp> <1331@ns.network.com> Reply-To: bill@twwells.UUCP (T. William Wells) Followup-To: /dev/null Organization: None, Ft. Lauderdale Lines: 32 Summary: Expires: Sender: Distribution: Keywords: In article <1331@ns.network.com> ddb@ns.UUCP (David Dyer-Bennet) writes: : But in practice nobody gets particularly bent out of shape if somebody writes : "Well, then we won't have the blasted thing done until august, I guess." : The formal convention is there, but it doesn't seem to be what people use : for figuring out the meaning of the sentence. He is in the house. vs. He is in the House. This is not a topic worth debating. The difference is in fact substantive. If you'd like an analogy, consider that, in C, pointer casts are often, by the uninformed, considered formal rather than substantive because it is often the case that the cast induces no change in the representation. This does not change the fact that casts are substantive. And ignorance of this point has caused many C programmers grief. Ignorance of the English point is much less likely to cause grief, not because the difference is not substantive, but because English is immensely redundant. Followups have been directed to /dev/null. --- Bill { uunet | novavax } !twwells!bill