Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!purdue!decwrl!labrea!rutgers!cmcl2!phri!marob!daveh From: daveh@marob.MASA.COM (Dave Hammond) Newsgroups: comp.lang.c Subject: Re: the Telephone Test (was: Re: case sensitivity) Message-ID: <630@marob.MASA.COM> Date: 1 May 89 18:08:48 GMT Reply-To: daveh@marob.masa.com (Dave Hammond) Organization: ESCC New York City Lines: 31 One person writes: >> On the East Coast, it is pronounced "care". Here in Silicon Valley, it >> is pronounced "char". Another person writes: >Yeah! I like to declare: > char (like a well-done steak) splat splat arg-vee >but always, at the top of my routines, I: > pound include studio-h (dancers might include studio-54 :->) My two cents worth: Since `char' is derived from `character', I've always pronounced it `kar', resulting in expressions like `kar star' and `kar star star'. The standard io header filename is pronounced `S T D eye-oh dot H', making its program inclusion line is `pound include S T D eye-oh dot H'. The contents of Array[] location subscript N is `Array sub N'. >I've also noticed the following: > while see equals get-char bang-equals eee-oh-ef . . . Sounds right to me. BTW, if regional affiliation matters -- I live on the East coast, but I was first introduced to C in the midwest. -- Dave Hammond daveh@marob.masa.com