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John Abreau wrote: > I was lecturing to my students yesterday and was asked 'what does GNU > stand for?'. My response was the standard line -- "Gnu Not Unix." > My English Majors (students) said, 'You cannot include the name of the > definition in the definition'. > I responded, "Programmers can...ever hear of recursion?" > > My question... was I being a smart S or a revolutionary? OR!! Am I wrong > entirely? Consider the source; the objection was from an English major, i.e. a Mundane. He's not one of us, so it's not surprising if he doesn't get it. My favorite has to do with commas and quotes. Due to typographic considerations, commas that functionally belong outside a set of quotes often get stuck inside quotes to make the printed output more visually appealing. English majors then declare that this is how it should be, regardless of how it mangles the parsing of a sentence, and will whine that it's wrong to put the comma outside where it really belongs, even when typography isn't an issue. One of my favorite rules of writing is: Don't use commas, which aren't necessary. In any case, there is the definition from the original Hacker's Dictionary: recursion: n. See recursion. Methinks the problem is merely a student who is humor-impaired. So far, medical research doesn't seem to have come up with a treatment for this crippling disability. - Subcription/unsubscription/info requests: send e-mail with "subscribe", "unsubscribe", or "info" on the first line of the message body to discuss-request at blu.org (Subject line is ignored).
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