Usage of english grammar. [modified]
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Technical people, often known to be poor in english grammar. Proper usage of verb, adverb, adjectives, semicolon, comma separation etc., Even, I dont remember english rules while writing a document. I write what is appropriate and easy to understand. Can anybody out here highlight how important it is ? Thanks, Sreenath -- modified at 11:09 Tuesday 17th October, 2006
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Technical people, often known to be poor in english grammar. Proper usage of verb, adverb, adjectives, semicolon, comma separation etc., Even, I dont remember english rules while writing a document. I write what is appropriate and easy to understand. Can anybody out here highlight how important it is ? Thanks, Sreenath -- modified at 11:09 Tuesday 17th October, 2006
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Can any "gurus" out here highlight how important it is ?
Not that I'm a guru, but I think basic sentence structure (ever try reading a translation of a Chinese instruction manual?) and proper spelling is important (and no, I think "colour" or "gray" is just fine--or is the less used one "grey"?). It definitely should be appropriate and easy to understand. Why for the life of me people don't put their documentation into MS Word and have it grammar and spell check the text, well, it's beyond me. Of course, I wrote some pretty butchered sentences above. Marc
People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith -
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Can any "gurus" out here highlight how important it is ?
Not that I'm a guru, but I think basic sentence structure (ever try reading a translation of a Chinese instruction manual?) and proper spelling is important (and no, I think "colour" or "gray" is just fine--or is the less used one "grey"?). It definitely should be appropriate and easy to understand. Why for the life of me people don't put their documentation into MS Word and have it grammar and spell check the text, well, it's beyond me. Of course, I wrote some pretty butchered sentences above. Marc
People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh SmithMarc Clifton wrote:
and no, I think "colour" or "gray" is just fine
What could possibly be wrong with knowing how to spell ?
Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ Metal Musings - Rex and my new metal blog
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Technical people, often known to be poor in english grammar. Proper usage of verb, adverb, adjectives, semicolon, comma separation etc., Even, I dont remember english rules while writing a document. I write what is appropriate and easy to understand. Can anybody out here highlight how important it is ? Thanks, Sreenath -- modified at 11:09 Tuesday 17th October, 2006
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Technical people, often known to be poor in english grammar. Proper usage of verb, adverb, adjectives, semicolon, comma separation etc.,
Technically-minded people (or, perhaps more precisely, computer programmers) are known to often use poor grammar: improper usage of words (casting a noun as a verb, etc.), misuse of punctuation (overuse or incorrect usage of semicolons, improper placement of commas, etc.) and poor sentence structure. ok... now i'm off to get my first cup of coffee for the day. If those dern masons mess with my head and make this all look like gibberish again.... :mad:
every night, i kneel at the foot of my bed and thank the Great Overseeing Politicians for protecting my freedoms by reducing their number, as if they were deer in a state park. -- Chris Losinger, Online Poker Players?
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Technical people, often known to be poor in english grammar. Proper usage of verb, adverb, adjectives, semicolon, comma separation etc., Even, I dont remember english rules while writing a document. I write what is appropriate and easy to understand. Can anybody out here highlight how important it is ? Thanks, Sreenath -- modified at 11:09 Tuesday 17th October, 2006
u shood use good grammer cause it makes u look smart
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Marc Clifton wrote:
and no, I think "colour" or "gray" is just fine
What could possibly be wrong with knowing how to spell ?
Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ Metal Musings - Rex and my new metal blog
Christian Graus wrote:
What could possibly be wrong with knowing how to spell ?
:laugh: Marc
People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith -
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Technical people, often known to be poor in english grammar. Proper usage of verb, adverb, adjectives, semicolon, comma separation etc.,
Technically-minded people (or, perhaps more precisely, computer programmers) are known to often use poor grammar: improper usage of words (casting a noun as a verb, etc.), misuse of punctuation (overuse or incorrect usage of semicolons, improper placement of commas, etc.) and poor sentence structure. ok... now i'm off to get my first cup of coffee for the day. If those dern masons mess with my head and make this all look like gibberish again.... :mad:
every night, i kneel at the foot of my bed and thank the Great Overseeing Politicians for protecting my freedoms by reducing their number, as if they were deer in a state park. -- Chris Losinger, Online Poker Players?
Shog9 wrote:
Technically-minded people (or, perhaps more precisely, computer programmers) are known to often use poor grammar: improper usage of words (casting a noun as a verb, etc.), misuse of punctuation (overuse or incorrect usage of semicolons, improper placement of commas, etc.) and poor sentence structure.
A see code that looks like this too. Bad casting, misuse of objects, poor class structure... ;P Marc
People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith -
Technical people, often known to be poor in english grammar. Proper usage of verb, adverb, adjectives, semicolon, comma separation etc., Even, I dont remember english rules while writing a document. I write what is appropriate and easy to understand. Can anybody out here highlight how important it is ? Thanks, Sreenath -- modified at 11:09 Tuesday 17th October, 2006
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Can anybody out here highlight how important it is ?
Depends on what you are writing or speaking about. If you are writing English technical documentation, or English comments in source code, or English used in the prompts and/or static text in an application, or speaking at a conference, it is pretty damn important. Just as people use appearance as an initial indicator, they tend to do the same with how someone speaks and/or writes. That whole "first impression" thing, 'ya know. I think that punctuation is less important than the wording of the content, but that is just my opinion. Not too much difference between:
The selected file is locked, possibly by another desktop application.
Please close any applications that may be using the file and try again.And:
The selected file is locked possibly by another desktop application
please close any applications that may be using the file and try again.Not exactly correct, but it gets the point across. But there is one between:
Please select the order showing the alert and click [Resolve] to clear it.
And:
Please to click resolve on alerting order
Or:
Resolve your order indicated alert
Peace!
-=- James
If you think it costs a lot to do it right, just wait until you find out how much it costs to do it wrong!
Avoid driving a vehicle taller than you and remember that Professional Driver on Closed Course does not mean your Dumb Ass on a Public Road!
DeleteFXPFiles & CheckFavorites (Please rate this post!) -
Technical people, often known to be poor in english grammar. Proper usage of verb, adverb, adjectives, semicolon, comma separation etc., Even, I dont remember english rules while writing a document. I write what is appropriate and easy to understand. Can anybody out here highlight how important it is ? Thanks, Sreenath -- modified at 11:09 Tuesday 17th October, 2006
It is very important to be able to communicate effectively.
Upcoming Scottish Developers events: * UK Security Evangelists On Tour (2nd November, Edinburgh) * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog
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Technical people, often known to be poor in english grammar. Proper usage of verb, adverb, adjectives, semicolon, comma separation etc., Even, I dont remember english rules while writing a document. I write what is appropriate and easy to understand. Can anybody out here highlight how important it is ? Thanks, Sreenath -- modified at 11:09 Tuesday 17th October, 2006
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
I write what is appropriate and easy to understand.
Which means what, exactly?
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Can anybody out here highlight how important it is ?
I consider it very important. I'm not going to write legal-ese, but I will put in what is necessary. If the target audience is unable to read it, tough.
"Approved Workmen Are Not Ashamed" - 2 Timothy 2:15
"Judge not by the eye but by the heart." - Native American Proverb
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Technical people, often known to be poor in english grammar. Proper usage of verb, adverb, adjectives, semicolon, comma separation etc., Even, I dont remember english rules while writing a document. I write what is appropriate and easy to understand. Can anybody out here highlight how important it is ? Thanks, Sreenath -- modified at 11:09 Tuesday 17th October, 2006
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Technical people, often known to be poor in english grammar.
The sentence is incorrectly structured. The comma should be replaced with "are".
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Proper usage of verb, adverb, adjectives, semicolon, comma separation etc.,
This paragraph ends without a sentence termination marker (full-stop). There is a comma at the end of the paragraph. There is a verb missing.
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Even, I dont remember english rules while writing a document.
The comma is unexpected. There is a missing apostrophe in "don't". There is incorrect capitalisation of "English".
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
I write what is appropriate and easy to understand.
You may wish to rethink that sentence.
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Can anybody out here highlight how important it is ?
There is an extra space between "is" and the question mark. The question mark should abut the last word in a query.
Upcoming Scottish Developers events: * UK Security Evangelists On Tour (2nd November, Edinburgh) * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog
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Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Technical people, often known to be poor in english grammar. Proper usage of verb, adverb, adjectives, semicolon, comma separation etc.,
Technically-minded people (or, perhaps more precisely, computer programmers) are known to often use poor grammar: improper usage of words (casting a noun as a verb, etc.), misuse of punctuation (overuse or incorrect usage of semicolons, improper placement of commas, etc.) and poor sentence structure. ok... now i'm off to get my first cup of coffee for the day. If those dern masons mess with my head and make this all look like gibberish again.... :mad:
every night, i kneel at the foot of my bed and thank the Great Overseeing Politicians for protecting my freedoms by reducing their number, as if they were deer in a state park. -- Chris Losinger, Online Poker Players?
Shog9 wrote:
casting a noun as a verb, etc.
So is that?
verb action = (verb)book;
Or do you mean using a noun as a verb? :-D Yeah, I think you do need some :java:
Using the GridView is like trying to explain to someone else how to move a third person's hands in order to tie your shoelaces for you. -Chris Maunder
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Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
I write what is appropriate and easy to understand.
Which means what, exactly?
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Can anybody out here highlight how important it is ?
I consider it very important. I'm not going to write legal-ese, but I will put in what is necessary. If the target audience is unable to read it, tough.
"Approved Workmen Are Not Ashamed" - 2 Timothy 2:15
"Judge not by the eye but by the heart." - Native American Proverb
DavidCrow wrote:
If the target audience is unable to read it, tough.
If the target audience is not able to read it then that suggests it wasn't written for that target audience.
Upcoming Scottish Developers events: * UK Security Evangelists On Tour (2nd November, Edinburgh) * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog
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Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
I write what is appropriate and easy to understand.
Which means what, exactly?
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Can anybody out here highlight how important it is ?
I consider it very important. I'm not going to write legal-ese, but I will put in what is necessary. If the target audience is unable to read it, tough.
"Approved Workmen Are Not Ashamed" - 2 Timothy 2:15
"Judge not by the eye but by the heart." - Native American Proverb
DavidCrow wrote:
Which means what, exactly?
Appropriate to the scenario(use case documentation, code documentation etc.,). I should be able to understand what I have written in the first place before making others to understand :) While writing the above sentences I did not even think of any rules. I wrote what is appropriate here. May be there are some errors. I cannot figure it out. I know basic :
He loves playing football. We love playing football.
(rule here is add 's' to the verb when the pronoun is plural) Do you think simple rule like helps in writing whole documentation. (documentation can be anything. Masy be use case documentation, system study etc.,) Let me know. Thanks, Sreenath -
DavidCrow wrote:
Which means what, exactly?
Appropriate to the scenario(use case documentation, code documentation etc.,). I should be able to understand what I have written in the first place before making others to understand :) While writing the above sentences I did not even think of any rules. I wrote what is appropriate here. May be there are some errors. I cannot figure it out. I know basic :
He loves playing football. We love playing football.
(rule here is add 's' to the verb when the pronoun is plural) Do you think simple rule like helps in writing whole documentation. (documentation can be anything. Masy be use case documentation, system study etc.,) Let me know. Thanks, SreenathSreenath Madyastha wrote:
I should be able to understand what I have written in the first place before making others to understand
When I write in Dutch I can understand it perfectly. The Dutch think I am a little crazy because it is rubbish to them. Then they just talk to me in English.
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
rule here is add 's' to the verb when the pronoun is plural
You may like to re-read what you wrote and you'll see that although you wrote it correctly, it does not conform to the rule you think you are using.
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Do you think simple rule like helps writing whole documentation.
Simple rules are the foundation of more complex rules. Documentation is often a description of a complex series of business rules. You must be aware of the complex rules of grammar too.
Upcoming Scottish Developers events: * UK Security Evangelists On Tour (2nd November, Edinburgh) * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog
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Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Technical people, often known to be poor in english grammar.
The sentence is incorrectly structured. The comma should be replaced with "are".
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Proper usage of verb, adverb, adjectives, semicolon, comma separation etc.,
This paragraph ends without a sentence termination marker (full-stop). There is a comma at the end of the paragraph. There is a verb missing.
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Even, I dont remember english rules while writing a document.
The comma is unexpected. There is a missing apostrophe in "don't". There is incorrect capitalisation of "English".
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
I write what is appropriate and easy to understand.
You may wish to rethink that sentence.
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Can anybody out here highlight how important it is ?
There is an extra space between "is" and the question mark. The question mark should abut the last word in a query.
Upcoming Scottish Developers events: * UK Security Evangelists On Tour (2nd November, Edinburgh) * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog
Thanks a lot !. Do you see such errors in all the messages ? Any tips or references on how to be perfect ? Thanks, Sreenath
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Technical people, often known to be poor in english grammar. Proper usage of verb, adverb, adjectives, semicolon, comma separation etc., Even, I dont remember english rules while writing a document. I write what is appropriate and easy to understand. Can anybody out here highlight how important it is ? Thanks, Sreenath -- modified at 11:09 Tuesday 17th October, 2006
Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Technical people, often known to be poor in english grammar.
Then how often do people use the grammar checking facility of word processors. And how often do you disagree with the grammar suggestions that, for instance, MS Word outputs.
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Sreenath Madyastha wrote:
Technical people, often known to be poor in english grammar.
Then how often do people use the grammar checking facility of word processors. And how often do you disagree with the grammar suggestions that, for instance, MS Word outputs.
MS Word is good for spell check. Gramatically we need to be perfect. What you think ? Thanks, Sreenath
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DavidCrow wrote:
If the target audience is unable to read it, tough.
If the target audience is not able to read it then that suggests it wasn't written for that target audience.
Upcoming Scottish Developers events: * UK Security Evangelists On Tour (2nd November, Edinburgh) * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog
Colin Angus Mackay wrote:
If the target audience is not able to read it then that suggests it wasn't written for that target audience.
You have to make an assumption that adult professionals can at least read at a 12th grade level. I read a report recently that stated most folks read comfortably at an 8th grade level.
"Approved Workmen Are Not Ashamed" - 2 Timothy 2:15
"Judge not by the eye but by the heart." - Native American Proverb
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MS Word is good for spell check. Gramatically we need to be perfect. What you think ? Thanks, Sreenath
Gramatically correct - yes Easily readable - yes Explaining complex subjects - no word processor will help you there. A case of ensuring that the complex subject is broken down sufficiently so that the subject becomes understandable, without being disjointed, even if you must use technically correct terminology. I suspect that if I told you of some of my opinions regarding MS Word's grammar checking utility, this thread might have to be relocated to the Soapbox.