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added Macmillan dictionary to the roster; added concern about ESL users
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Dreaded (MariaDB) = Worked with in PAST year BUT DO NOT Want to work with NEXT year

Please reconsider using "dread" to describe technologies one worked with last year but does not want to work with this year. Not wanting to work with a certain technology simply means not looking forward to working with it for a variety of reasons (which may not even be related to the technology's shortcomings).

Whereas "dread" implies a sense of fear, of being scarred for the rest of your life by the experience. Take a look at what dictionaries have to say about the word. This is the definition of "dread" from the Cambridge dictionary:

to feel extremely worried or frightened about something that is going to happen or that might happen

And these are two definitions of it from the Collins dictionary:

ADJECTIVE

  1. greatly feared; frightful; terrible

  2. held in awe or reverential fear

And this one is from the Macmillan dictionary:

to feel very worried about something that might happen or something that is going to happen

It's certainly not what I (and many others) mean when they say they "don't want to work" with something. Not everything has to be a binary choice - by reducing "not want to" to "dread", you risk grossly misrepresenting how people feel about technologies as well as what significance (if any) those have for the programmer community at large.

An additional concern is that such an interpretation has a high potential of confusing people for whom English is a second language who generally rely on common definitions of the words.

Dreaded (MariaDB) = Worked with in PAST year BUT DO NOT Want to work with NEXT year

Please reconsider using "dread" to describe technologies one worked with last year but does not want to work with this year. Not wanting to work with a certain technology simply means not looking forward to working with it for a variety of reasons (which may not even be related to the technology's shortcomings).

Whereas "dread" implies a sense of fear, of being scarred for the rest of your life by the experience. Take a look at what dictionaries have to say about the word. This is the definition of "dread" from the Cambridge dictionary:

to feel extremely worried or frightened about something that is going to happen or that might happen

And these are two definitions of it from the Collins dictionary:

ADJECTIVE

  1. greatly feared; frightful; terrible

  2. held in awe or reverential fear

It's certainly not what I (and many others) mean when they say they "don't want to work" with something. Not everything has to be a binary choice - by reducing "not want to" to "dread", you risk grossly misrepresenting how people feel about technologies as well as what significance (if any) those have for the programmer community at large.

Dreaded (MariaDB) = Worked with in PAST year BUT DO NOT Want to work with NEXT year

Please reconsider using "dread" to describe technologies one worked with last year but does not want to work with this year. Not wanting to work with a certain technology simply means not looking forward to working with it for a variety of reasons (which may not even be related to the technology's shortcomings).

Whereas "dread" implies a sense of fear, of being scarred for the rest of your life by the experience. Take a look at what dictionaries have to say about the word. This is the definition of "dread" from the Cambridge dictionary:

to feel extremely worried or frightened about something that is going to happen or that might happen

And these are two definitions of it from the Collins dictionary:

ADJECTIVE

  1. greatly feared; frightful; terrible

  2. held in awe or reverential fear

And this one is from the Macmillan dictionary:

to feel very worried about something that might happen or something that is going to happen

It's certainly not what I (and many others) mean when they say they "don't want to work" with something. Not everything has to be a binary choice - by reducing "not want to" to "dread", you risk grossly misrepresenting how people feel about technologies as well as what significance (if any) those have for the programmer community at large.

An additional concern is that such an interpretation has a high potential of confusing people for whom English is a second language who generally rely on common definitions of the words.

Source Link
0Valt
  • 10.3k
  • 4
  • 68
  • 101

Dreaded (MariaDB) = Worked with in PAST year BUT DO NOT Want to work with NEXT year

Please reconsider using "dread" to describe technologies one worked with last year but does not want to work with this year. Not wanting to work with a certain technology simply means not looking forward to working with it for a variety of reasons (which may not even be related to the technology's shortcomings).

Whereas "dread" implies a sense of fear, of being scarred for the rest of your life by the experience. Take a look at what dictionaries have to say about the word. This is the definition of "dread" from the Cambridge dictionary:

to feel extremely worried or frightened about something that is going to happen or that might happen

And these are two definitions of it from the Collins dictionary:

ADJECTIVE

  1. greatly feared; frightful; terrible

  2. held in awe or reverential fear

It's certainly not what I (and many others) mean when they say they "don't want to work" with something. Not everything has to be a binary choice - by reducing "not want to" to "dread", you risk grossly misrepresenting how people feel about technologies as well as what significance (if any) those have for the programmer community at large.