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uuh

uh???

If I understood well the question was: "does every single coder in the world know enough english to use the exact same reserved words I do?"

Well.. english is not the subject here but programming language reserved words. I mean, when I started about 10 yrs ago, I didn't have any clue of english, and still I was able to program simple things by learning the programming language, even when I did not knew what they meant ( in english ). As a matter of fact this help me to learn english.

For example. I know to do an "iteración" ( iteration of course ) I had to write:

 for( i = 0 ; i < 100 ; i++ ) {}

To me the "for", the ";" and the "++" where simple foreign words or symbols. Later I learn that "for" meant "para" and "while" meant "mientras" etc. but in the mean time I did not need to know english, but in my case what I needed was to know "C".

Of course when I needed to learn more things, I had to learn english, for the documentation is written in that language.

So the answer is: No, I don't see if, while, for etc. in my native language. I see them in english, but they didn't mean to me any other thing that they meant for the for the programming language in turn.

Is like switch statement in bash: case .. esac. What Is "esac"... for me the end of the switch statement in bash.

I guess thats what we call "abstraction"

show/hide this revision's text 1

uuh ???

If I understood well the question was: "does every single coder in the world know enough english to use the exact same reserved words I do?"

Well.. english is not the subject here but programming language reserved words. I mean, when I started about 10 yrs ago, I didn't have any clue of english, and still I was able to program simple things by learning the programming language, even when I did not knew what they meant ( in english ). As a matter of fact this help me to learn english.

For example. I know to do an "iteración" ( iteration of course ) I had to write:

 for( i = 0 ; i < 100 ; i++ ) {}

To me the "for", the ";" and the "++" where simple foreign words or symbols. Later I learn that "for" meant "para" and "while" meant "mientras" etc. but in the mean time I did not need to know english, but in my case what I needed was to know "C".

Of course when I needed to learn more things, I had to learn english, for the documentation is written in that language.

So the answer is: No, I don't see if, while, for etc. in my native language. I see them in english, but they didn't mean to me any other thing that they meant for the for the programming language in turn.

Is like switch statement in bash: case .. esac. What Is "esac"... for me the end of the switch statement in bash.

I guess thats what we call "abstraction"