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So recently in the Rails literature the non-word (please, no down grades, I know non-word is a non-word but I'm not publishing this stuff and I don't claim to be more intelligent than those who write books :) P "dasherize" has become somewhat of a de-facto term as in:

"to_xml will default to dasherizing the field names"

Now in every other academic or pseudo-academic field this sort of corruption of the language is not tolerated. Mathematics certainly has its fair share of unique terminology but I haven't come across such bastardizations of the language.

Thoughts?

btw, the above quote could easily and correctly have stated:

to_xml will default to putting dashes in the field names

See how easy that was?

so in a book I just started reading it refers to "hyphenated notation" meaning the same thing as dasherize in the rails community!

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oh, and please excuse my ignorance!! The proper sentence should be: to_xml with default to HYPHENATING the field names!!! – klyde Jan 28 at 16:34
"dasherize" is a perfectly cromulent word. – Paul Tomblin Jan 28 at 16:36
"Hypenate" can also mean to put hyphens between the syllables of a word so it fits better on a line of text. – Rob Kennedy Jan 28 at 16:49
@Rob Kennedy: yes, but in context, its meaning is perfectly clear – Adriano Varoli Piazza Jan 28 at 17:03
cromulent or crapulent? – StingyJack Jan 28 at 17:06
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closed as not a real question by Bombe, Paul Tomblin, Robert S., George Stocker Jan 30 at 2:57

23 Answers

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I couldn't agree more. The one that I have seen slipping into general use recently that makes me want to scratch my eyes out is "performant".

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Now in every other academic or pseudo-academic field this sort of corruption of the language is not tolerated.

As someone with a Masters in English and more than a few publications in literary journals, I call bullshit. For real.

First of all, language is infinitely corruptible by design. It fluctuates and changes all the time. Thinkst thou not so? Then a pox upon thee!

Second, there are a whole lot of dialects of English out there, each one of which corrupts the others to an extent. The inner-city homeboy and the Scottish Highlands goat herder are both speaking English -- an English that is incomprehensible to others, but still English.

The English you apparently suppose is being "corrupted" is what we typically call "Standard Written English." There is an entire cottage industry of grammar nit-pickers who would love to have us believe that English is some pure holy thing, rather than what it is: an unholy marriage between poorly-pronounced French and throat-clanging Saxon. The rules they have foisted upon us are self-contradictory, poorly considered, and often flat-out wrong.

Take for instance the rule against ending a sentence with a preposition. That "rule" dates from the 16th century. The reason for it? Some scholars aspired to make English as noble as Latin. They noticed that the words that make up "preposition" come from the Latin words pre (before) and ponere (to place). Obviously, if it's at the end of the sentence, it's not coming before anything, so it's a mistake.

The only problem with that "rule" is it's not true. People do this all the time. Same with split infinitives -- the only reason people think we shouldn't was because someone back in the day noticed that in Latin you can't split them. But you can in English, and so plenty of people do, including educated people.

Truth is, people make rules like this for reasons that have nothing to do with the language, but everything to do with power. They follow rules like those above because they hope, by doing so, to be perceived as smart and educated. But sub-communities are always creating their own words and reinventing their own grammar.

And I say let them.

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It's wonderful to hear an educated response. But, isn't there something to said for taking the "high road" and learning to speak "proper" English? I commented in another response that I have no problems with a dynamic language but the changes should be so overwhelming (darned 300-character limit) – perryneal Jan 28 at 17:21
(correction - popular) or compelling that they almost demand the change? Electronic mail which begat E-mail which begat email. The shortened version was just so much easier to use. – perryneal Jan 28 at 17:22
+1. What keeps the language from falling into god-awful teen newspeak is eventually those teens grow up and want to get a job, and they confront an old person who looks at then straight in the eye and says "I have no idea what the hell you're talking about," and they start learning "proper" English. – Darcy Casselman Jan 28 at 17:37
I'd give this answer more than one upvote if I could. – Paul Tomblin Jan 28 at 18:01
@perryneal: There are a million and one reasons to learn "proper" English, but those reasons are almost purely social. If you're working class but want to get into the middle class, you'll do better if you don't talk like a plumber from the Bronx. But most English teachers will never tell you this. – rtperson Jan 28 at 18:30
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"dasherize" is a perfectly cromulent word. And I can vouch for the truthiness of it.

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I feel we've all been embiggened by your insights. – Adam Bellaire Jan 28 at 16:43
great comment =) – Sergio Acosta Jan 28 at 16:48
Adam I'd giveyour comment an upvote if I could. – HLGEM Jan 28 at 16:52
this is an imperialist outrage to those of us in the dashify community – annakata Jan 28 at 16:59
I think you left out the phrase "make no mistake" – thursdaysgeek Jan 29 at 3:58
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Neologisms are a part of life and how the language evolves. Some are useful, others less so. In computer programming, we're constantly reinventing the process, it's no surprise that we reinvent the language to describe the process.

That being said, "dasherize" is pretty awful.

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If most people agree that "dasherize" is awful, it won't make it. Many neologisms are coined, and relatively few make it into the mainstream language. – David Thornley Jan 28 at 18:19
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I have to agree with you. I'm not a fan of the bastardization of the English language. Maybe I'm just getting old and crotchety but I think if you "publish" something (which could be sending an e-mail, making a comment on Stack Overflow, or writing a blog) then you should use proper language and grammar.

I am daily mortified by otherwise EXTREMELY intelligent people in our professions that can't differentiate 'their', 'there', and 'they're'. There are so many grammar and spelling mistakes in some blogs that I can't concentrate on the content.

Personally, I can't stand "grok". I don't know WHAT it is about that word but it just grates on me every time I hear it. I guess I just don't grok "grok".

My other big one is "disrespect" and "impact". You are NOT "disrespected". You are shown disrespect or someone has disrespect for you. In spite of constant over-use, you are not "impacted" by something. Something has an impact on you.

The bottom line is that people will judge you by your speech. This is in NO way meant as a criticism of people that don't speak English as a native language. From what I've seen - they do MUCH better in my language than I'd EVER do in theirs.

Just my two cents worth.

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not to mention that non-native speakers of English tend to do better than most native-speaking Americans... – rmeador Jan 28 at 16:52
AMEN! I used to date a lady and I laughed when she told me her job was to teach Spanish to Mexican kids. I replied, "They're Mexican! Don't they already speak Spanish?" She retorted, "How many years of English did you have?" Shut ME right up! – perryneal Jan 28 at 16:54
in some circles of otherwise intelligent people the non-work comfortability is used to mean content!!! I've tried to reason with these people that this is just plain stupid but to no avail :( – klyde Jan 28 at 16:54
@klyde - I think Bill Engvall said it best. You just can't fix stupid. – perryneal Jan 28 at 16:58
As others have noted in their answers, what you call "bastardization" is simply a natural process, a part of how language works: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language_change – Fabian Steeg Jan 28 at 17:00
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The real world is not academia, so if a word is expressive then it will either stick around or be ignored if no one really uses it. New words show up all the time, that's just how it is.

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You know what I call "Misuse of English in the computer literature"?

Saying depreciated instead of deprecated...

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Funny thing is though, I recently looked up what "deprecated" actually means literally and was rather surprised. And I believe I would have not been had it been "depreciated", which I would expect to mean precisely what "deprecated" means: the opposite of "appreciated". – Fabian Steeg Jan 28 at 17:08
In Spanish, it is. Apreciar is an antonym to Despreciar and the latter doesn't mean Deprecar. In Italian, apprezzare, disprezzare, deprecare (though I'm not sure about the latter). – Adriano Varoli Piazza Jan 28 at 17:57
@Ionut, you lose. They don't mean the same thing. Funny how the "staunchest defenders" of the language are the ones who don't know what they're talking about. – Paul Tomblin Jan 28 at 18:21
For those of you playing at home: "depreciated" = dropped in value. "Deprecated" = disapproved of, belittled, disparaged. But it sounds like lonut is complaining about people mixing up the two, rather than advocating the one over the other. – rtperson Jan 28 at 19:12
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@Paul Tomblin, of course they don't mean the same thing. That's why I'm complaining (there's an "instead" adverb in my post as a clue), because people mix them. It was my example of misuse of English in computer... discussions. – Ionut G. Stan Jan 28 at 20:28
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Well, keep in mind that once everyone starts using a word, it becomes a word. That's how new words come into being - you think people fifty years ago would have said "email"?

Now, I know nothing about this particular word, so I'm not going to comment on its merits, but if people keep using it and finding it useful, it could become a commonly accepted word. Or it might be forgotten.

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True. It used to be written "E-mail". – Scottie T Jan 28 at 16:40
yes but this was because email didn't exist prior to 1972 or thereabout. The act of hyphenating a word already hqs a name! – klyde Jan 28 at 17:12
Hyphenating can be a nightmare. – perryneal Jan 28 at 17:17
Sort of. Hyphenating might have always existed, but I'm sure it has changed. At least the way in which it is used or the purpose behind the use. To take another example - Thou has become You. – Sasha Jan 28 at 17:35
@Sasha: Quick correction. "Thou" and "You" always coexisted in English, like "tu" and "vous" in French. Sometime around 1650 the second-person singular dropped out of common use, and "You" took over. More details at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thou. – rtperson Jan 28 at 18:57
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Languages are defined by use, not by dictionaries. Dictionaries merely run after the facts. As long as the receiver of the conversation can understand what the meaning of the word is supposed to be, the word is valid.

On a side note:

I read this book once where almost all of the races and creatures were named with invented words without ever explaining them. It made it so much better because I could make them as awesome as my imagination could come up with (ergo pretty awesome ;)

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So, it's valid to use "allot" in place of "a lot"? After all, with re-reading a few times, I can understand it. – thursdaysgeek Jan 29 at 3:47
OK, you found one of my pet peeves. It's still not as bad as using "alot". I can understand substituting a nearby word, but that second one is just degenerate. In a hundred years, though, it could be orthodox. – willc2 Feb 17 at 3:56
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Actually I have to disagree with you....it is allowed in other disciplines. Cognitively, all languages change over time. The English we speak is different from what our parents speak and what their parents speak and will be different than what our children will speak. New words are added all the time and ones that aren't as popular fall by the way side. (You should watch Erin McKean). The reason why new words aren't added to the dictionary is that the dictionary can only be so big (I mean physically, who wants to own a 2 ton dictionary....well besides me). Not allowing new words to be created is like telling someone they can't evovle a programming language, because the new key word isn't in the current version of it. The thing you have to remember is that changing languages allow them to become more efficent and serve the needs of the people at the time. I am pretty sure that you understood what the person meant by the word "dasherize." You may not have liked it, but it conveyed the necessary though, which is the sole point of language and communication.

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On the other hand, language should be invisible. He shouldn't be made to worry about the author's diction when reading. Since Klyde obviously found the word so jarring, the author didn't make a good word choice. There's an argument for a more innocuous word. – Rob Kennedy Jan 28 at 17:24
not only that, I would say that the core language probably shouldn't change that much and certainly not as arbitrarily as it does in technology. Imagine a kid after reading some rails book answering a the following question in English class: Synonym for hyphenate? dasherisze – klyde Jan 28 at 17:28
@Klyde: EXCELLENT point. I heard a NPR segment on teaching kids to use the proper language "set" for a given situation. What would be proper on the street isn't in the classroom, etc. – perryneal Jan 28 at 17:30
or this: Is there anything wrong in this sentence: The athlete was very performant and received the gold medal. – klyde Jan 28 at 17:30
Klyde, what other answer should that kid have given to that question? – Rob Kennedy Jan 28 at 17:36
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Remember the days when Google was not a verb...?

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Verbing weirds language. – Graeme Perrow Jan 29 at 4:03
languaging is verbalicious! – Steven A. Lowe Jan 29 at 5:11
Googling entered the lexicon because it's easier to say than "search for it on google". Same thing with grep shorter version of "use the grep command to filter" I admit these 2 terms seem quite natural now. – klyde Jan 29 at 14:26
@Graeme Perrow: +1 for Calvin & Hobbes! – mmyers Mar 16 at 21:08
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The one that annoys me is "allot." Allot is a verb that means to distribute by portions. The words "a lot" mean many. It used to be that people would use "alot," but the spellchecker would catch that, so now they use a word that is so completely wrong that it can cause confusion.

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That's what good editors are for.

(Maybe you only see this bastardization in books from certain publishers?)

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agreed, any published material in a non fiction genre should stick to proper language.....otherwise you may kids running around saying why are you dasherizing (instead of hyphenating) that word!! – klyde Jan 28 at 16:33
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There's lots of domain-specific jargon. "Dasherize" happens to be in Rails' lexicon. If you'd decided you would rather call it "dashesquifying," that would deserve a slap.

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what about hyphenating? doesn't that describe it equally as well and it's already a word!!!! – klyde Jan 28 at 16:43
Yes, but "dasherize" is already an ActiveSupport method. "Hyphenate" is an English punctuation term and thus somewhat ambiguous in this context. For example, "hyphenating the object's properties" could mean that the properties are all joined by hyphens or that hyphens replace spaces. – Chuck Jan 29 at 2:10
Wait?! What DOES "dasherize" mean then? (I don't use Rails, so could you explain it in English?) – thursdaysgeek Jan 29 at 3:56
In Rails, variable and database names are normally written with_underscores. Since the convention in HTML is to use hyphenated words, ActiveSupport includes a String method called dasherize that replaces _ with -. (There's a corresponding method called tableize that does the opposite.) – Chuck Jan 29 at 21:57
Up-voted just so people see Chuck's comment. Or rather, Envoterized it. – willc2 Feb 17 at 4:02
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If "dasherize" sends a chill up your spine, you might want to check out the Jargon File Lexicon:

http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html/lexicon.html

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It doesn't list "HTTP Referer" :( – Ates Goral Jan 28 at 17:46
HTTP Referer is not hacker jargon, but a technical term. – Adriano Varoli Piazza Jan 28 at 17:58
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Your supposition seems to be that no other discipline makes up words to describe concepts. I wonder whether you really know that, or whether it's simply that you don't have much experience reading the literature of other disciplines and so you think the practice is unique to your field.

All fields have jargon. Read a law review. Read some literary criticism. (I read the first page of a friend's biochemistry article, and I accused him of inventing every other word!)

In your particular example, I think dasherize has merit. It's not simply "putting dashes in the field names." It probably involves putting dashes in specific places in the field names according to some set of rules, no? Would you have the text reiterate the rules every time the process is mentioned, just to avoid applying a name?

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I'm sure the rails people are anus-peptic, phrasmotic, even compunctious to have caused you such pericombobulations...

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dude speak english – Shiva Feb 21 at 15:32
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I think you missed something... Ah yes, wit. Let's charitably assume you aren't from the UK, and are unfamilar with Blackadder. No, it's still a massive sense of humour fail. I'd try something more your speed next time, but slapstick doesn't come across in plain text. – annakata Feb 21 at 18:31
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At least this web site has been Ajaxified.

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A number of answers on this topic have focused on new terminology, good or bad.

But what about new syntax? The foremost example in my view is the verb "to persist". In its age-old acceptation, that verb is intransitive: Something persists.

When I first came across persistence documentation, I couldn't get over the transitive use of the verb: To persist an entity (meaning: to make it persistent). To my shame, I have now grown accustomed to that use, but I persist in the opinion that it is an incredible perversion of the original meaning of the word! Will that usage persist?

(The problem with turning an intransitive verb into a transitive one is that it weakens both versions of the verb. After all, the sentence The cat eats the mouse should never come to mean that the cat is being eaten...)

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the word is "hyphenated"

[this is probably some subtle form of strategery just to get people to talk about it]

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@[thursdaysgeek]: it's my favorite Bush-ism. I think he came up with it just to mess with Kerry. It's also a Saturday Night Live skit reference. – Steven A. Lowe Jan 29 at 5:10
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'dasherize' is a method name. 'dasherizing' is coder speak, sorta, refering to the 'dasherize' method.

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Sometimes, the crux of the problem is that english is terribly over-verbose and full of redundancies and inefficiencies.

You will come to realise this if you learn, say, Japanese or Russian. With English, you spend an awful lot of time using words that don't add any meaning.

It does and should hurt a programmer to be forced to follow rules for the sake of English correctness at the expense of clarity and brevity.

'Dasherize' is perfectly clear to me. If a word (or pseudo-word) communicates effectively and succinctly, then use it.

A case in point, one answer above complains that "impacted" should be: "something has an impact on you"... If you're programming, do you write 1 word that communicates effectively or concern yourself with 5 that don't add any clarity or meaning whatsoever?

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We're computer programmers. We like making up funny words, and acting like nerds. I have no problem with weird words like that.

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