Oh god, that brings back some bad memories, "Where the **** is that squiggly thing on
this stupid Finnish keyboard? I am never using these stupid umlauts when I grow up, damn
it" = me at around 12 years of age.
And here we are, 20 years later, I can barely string together a coherent written sentence
in my native tongue. I blame ASCII.
Sampsa
On 22 Sep 2009, at 22:34, Johnny Billquist wrote:
Paul Koning wrote:
Excerpt of message (sent 22 September 2009) by Johnny Billquist:
Mark Wickens wrote:
Hope you guys don't mind but I mentioned this to the Hoff and he pointed
out that a period '.' can be used validly instead of a ';' as a
separator between the version number and the filename.
Indeed. You can also use <> instead of [] as directory brackets.
All because of confusion within DEC at the time when they tried to decide on a standard
for all DEC OSes.
The reason for avoiding [] is that those are "national characters" --
they might be letters with umlauts or stuff like that, in the ancient
days of non-English 7-bit character sets. Latin-1 obsoleted that
notion. But until that happened, there was an internal DEC directive
to avoid those code points... []{}\_|# and perhaps even $...
A few people paid attention, most (like RSTS) just ignored it.
Indeed. But after a while I got used to reading DB0: 120,114 :-)
Johnny
--
Johnny Billquist || "I'm on a bus
|| on a psychedelic
trip
email: bqt at softjar.se || Reading murder books
pdp is alive! || tryin' to stay hip" -
B. Idol
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