show/hide this revision's text 3 fixed type

You mean?

wenn (i < größe) {
    wähle
        fall 1:
            drucke »Guten Tag!«
        anderenfalls:
            drucke »Nein, danke«
} sonst {
    durcke drucke »Gern geschehen«
}

Its mind boggling.

IMHO the non-English speaker are even in the advantage. Programming lingo and our natural language are separat. Whereas you English speakers overload native terms with technical terms. Doesn't this lead to dangerous confusions or missunderstandings sometimes?

show/hide this revision's text 2 added 2 characters in body

You mean?

wenn (i < größe) {
    wähle
        fall 1:
            drucke »Guten Tag!«
        jedenfallsanderenfalls:
            drucke »Nein, danke«
} sonst {
    durcke »Gern geschehen«
}

Its mind boggling.

IMHO the non-English speaker are even in the advantage. Programming lingo and our natural language are separat. Whereas you English speakers overload native terms with technical terms. Doesn't this lead to dangerous confusions or missunderstandings sometimes?

show/hide this revision's text 1

You mean?

wenn (i < größe) {
    wähle
        fall 1:
            drucke »Guten Tag!«
        jedenfalls:
            drucke »Nein, danke«
} sonst {
    durcke »Gern geschehen«
}

Its mind boggling.

IMHO the non-English speaker are even in the advantage. Programming lingo and our natural language are separat. Whereas you English speakers overload native terms with technical terms. Doesn't this lead to dangerous confusions or missunderstandings sometimes?