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Nov 18, 2020 at 18:51 comment added Adrian McCarthy @VLAZ: You suggest that SEQUEL morphed into SQL. Actually, they were contemporaries for a time. I worked on a product that used both of these languages simultaneously. Our database vendor supported both, and their trainers and support people were very particular about being clear about which interface was being discussed at any point.
Nov 15, 2020 at 2:18 comment added Bernhard Barker I think the problem with this reasoning to allow questions about finding the "correct" pronunciation is that whether or not it's on-topic would be dependent on its answers. This makes it really difficult to have any sort of clear rule about which questions are fine and which aren't, especially when it doesn't have an answer yet (assuming those looking at it don't necessarily know the answer, or know there isn't one, which shouldn't be a requirement to vote to close something). Unless you're more commenting on what a good answer looks like, but this may not apply if there's just one way.
Nov 15, 2020 at 1:44 comment added Bernhard Barker @TylerH "a symbol/word/name, etc. being mispronounced in real life has no bearing on whether it will run when typed" - true, but programming involves researching things online and communicating with other programmers. For symbols at least, both of those can be significantly more difficult/embarrassing if you don't even know the name of the thing you're trying to reference. You could probably extend this argument to general English, interpersonal skills or hardware questions, but the difference is these are unmistakably about programming and don't make sense to ask elsewhere.
Nov 14, 2020 at 15:47 comment added cigien Note that How do I pronounce “=>” as used in lambda expressions in .Net has been locked now.
Nov 13, 2020 at 9:53 comment added Quantum7 Thanks for voicing this, I completely agree. Pronunciation can be important for clear communication in some settings. In others, "there are two pronounciations" is perfectly acceptable.
Nov 12, 2020 at 15:11 comment added TylerH @R.M. Even worse, a not-inconsequential amount of people pronounce it "SQuirreL"...
Nov 11, 2020 at 19:24 comment added Laurel For the record, naming questions are off topic on ELU as well. See ELU meta for more information: english.meta.stackexchange.com/q/9607/191178. (Some questions are not on topic anywhere on the SE network.)
Nov 11, 2020 at 18:56 comment added Heretic Monkey "discussing code with your colleagues is an important part of programming" True. So is whether to use tabs or spaces, or to use Git Flow. The question is whether the discussion has to occur on Stack Overflow or not.
Nov 11, 2020 at 18:34 comment added R.M. @VLAZ Yes, but that's because both "sequel" and "S-Q-L" are prevalent. If you roll up with "Squickel", you're going to get either odd looks or blank confusion. -- I think the issues with these questions as treating them as asking about "The One True Correct Pronunciation", which is often an invitation to flame wars. Treating them as "how do I pronounce this such that I'm understood", where "both are fine" is a valid answer seems more sane to me. - And one which I feel should be on topic, as discussing code with your colleagues is an important part of programming.
Nov 11, 2020 at 18:02 comment added VLAZ Some might have an objective answer but...spoken human language being what it is will inevitably muck things up. Shining example is "SQL". You're supposed to pronounce it "sequel". Indeed, that literally used to be the name: SEQUEL which was then reworked into SQL. So, objectively, it's to be pronounced as the word. Yet, plenty of people pronounce the individual letters. I've been in many conversations where one person would say "sequel" the other "es qu el". Usually nobody minds - all parties know what the spoken term is about. Language drifted despite there being a "correct" pronunciation.
Nov 11, 2020 at 17:31 comment added cigien I don't disagree that some pronunciations have an objective answer. I also think it's useful to know what notable public figures have said about these things. However, there are suitable forums for such discussions, such as Reddit or Quora, and I don't think SO is one of them.
Nov 11, 2020 at 17:20 comment added TylerH By naming questions, I mean mostly "what should I call/name this", not "what is this called".
Nov 11, 2020 at 17:08 comment added Mark Amery "Note that naming questions are off-topic and belong on, for example, EL&U." - probably unsurprisingly, I disagree with this too, though even on that point I may be in the minority. Such questions can be critically important to know the answer to - you can't effectiively google for something if you don't know its name - and often have objective answers. It doesn't make any sense to me to disallow them. (And while I can't speak for their community, I can't imagine EL&U would welcome programmers posting questions about the names of operators.)
Nov 11, 2020 at 17:04 comment added TylerH Note that naming/calling questions are off-topic and belong on, for example, EL&U. As such pronunciation questions also probably belong on that site, too. Even with "official things", it's like "gif". There's an official pronunciation but you'll still find plenty of people who pronounce it differently (and swear by it). Perhaps more important, a symbol/word/name, etc. being mispronounced in real life has no bearing on whether it will run when typed. So I think such questions are not about programming insofar as the scope of SO goes, until we get languages/IDEs that convert speech to text.
Nov 11, 2020 at 17:03 history edited Mark Amery CC BY-SA 4.0
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Nov 11, 2020 at 16:57 history answered Mark Amery CC BY-SA 4.0