Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Fri, 14 Mar 2003 11:18:27 -0300
From:      Ataualpa Albert Carmo Braga <atabraga@iqm.unicamp.br>
To:        chromexa@ovis.net
Cc:        Sue Blake <sue@welearn.com.au>, David Chavarria <davidc@huyett.com>, FreeBSD Newbies <freebsd-newbies@FreeBSD.ORG>, Steve-o Kudlak <chromexa@o.q.net>, ulmoq <ulmo@q.net>
Subject:   Re: Hard words [was: Dictionary of Terms]
Message-ID:  <15985.58547.723458.569198@bico-de-lacre.iqm.unicamp.br>
In-Reply-To: <3E71E3D5.57838161@ovis.net>
References:  <KAEAKMACDAGFNDDHIBJIOEGPCAAA.davidc@huyett.com> <20030314121550.J67648@welearn.com.au> <3E71E3D5.57838161@ovis.net>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help

http://foldoc.doc.ic.ac.uk/foldoc/index.html

>>>>> on Friday, 14 Mar 2003 14:14:45, Steve Kudlak wrote:
 |
 |
 |
 |Sue Blake wrote:
 |
 |> On Thu, Mar 13, 2003 at 02:15:59PM -0600, David Chavarria wrote:
 |> > I like the man pages and the handbook, but I was wondering if anyone knew
 |> > of a dictionary that alphabetically listed FreeBSD/Unix terms?
 |> >
 |> > Or, is my best bet to just man a term I don't know when I come across it?
 |>
 |> Some of those words will have man pages, but for a while I've been
 |> concerned about another group of words that newbies might struggle with.
 |>
 |> These are ordinary everyday words that have been adopted with a
 |> specific relevance to unix which isn't always very clear despite
 |> the familiarity of the word. Also it can be a bit hard to translate
 |> from the word's everyday concept to the unix concept.
 |>
 |> Some other words are just plain English words, but not ones we all
 |> use often. Some people would use or hear them in their work or study
 |> while others would never encounter them. Ten years ago the average
 |> computer user had a large vocabulary and was in the habit of growing
 |> it daily, but that is no longer the case. If you're sweating over a
 |> man page about some new complex thingy, the last thing you need is
 |> to be diverted by a difficult word or concept along the way.
 |>
 |> Let me try to think of some examples...
 |>  recursive
 |>  precedence
 |>  canonical
 |>  dynamic
 |>  architecture
 |>  delimiting
 |>  collation
 |>  primaries
 |>  lexicographically
 |>  descend
 |>  string
 |>  precedence
 |>  hierarchy
 |>  default
 |>  operator
 |>  spool
 |>  traversal
 |>  pseudo
 |>  cooked
 |>  raw
 |>  affirmatively
 |>  escaped
 |>  superseded
 |>  interface
 |>  verbose
 |>  statically
 |>  contiguous
 |>  append
 |>  construct
 |>  implicit
 |>  adjacent
 |>  meta
 |>  truncated
 |>  indirection
 |>  operand
 |>  options
 |>  argument
 |>  parameter
 |>  reiteratively
 |>  asynchronous
 |>
 |> I bet you're all saying that some of those words are easy, but not
 |> everyone would agree on which are the easy words. New unix users
 |> might find it easier to ask "what does inode mean" ( = I'm new to
 |> this unix stuff) than "what does implicit mean" ( = personally I
 |> don't have a good vocabulary).
 |>
 |> Although all those words can be found in a dictionary, the dictionary
 |> isn't going to help the task at hand very much. Most are not
 |> likely to be found in a dictionary of computing because they're
 |> regarded as ordinary English words.
 |>
 |> You might also encounter concepts which a basic unix book or course
 |> should make clear, though they often don't spell it out in a way
 |> that's easy to look up:
 |>  link to/from
 |>  mounted on
 |>  links are followed
 |>  indirected through
 |>  soft limit
 |>  null string
 |>  span filesystems
 |>  rooted in
 |>  referenced by
 |>  mutually exclusive
 |>
 |> Have other people been stalled by words like those listed above,
 |> or is it not such a big deal after all?
 |>
 |> This sort of problem is sometimes addressed in freebsd-questions,
 |> where all FreeBSD help requests and answers should go.
 |>
 |> On the other hand, in freebsd-newbies we can look at this stuff
 |> preemptively (yikes there's another word!) in order to help
 |> each other navigate the documentation for themselves, and it's
 |> not really a question about FreeBSD after all.
 |>
 |> If anyone has any ideas or resources that might help others to deal
 |> with the general vocabulary, I'm sure your contribution would be
 |> welcome.
 |>
 |> --
 |>
 |> Regards,
 |>         -*Sue*-
 |>
 |>
 |>
 |>
 |> To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
 |> with "unsubscribe freebsd-newbies" in the body of the message
 |
 |Maybe there should be a hardwords dictionary. I am
 |hardly a newbie so I think of those words in the various
 |situations, dare I say "contexts" where I used them.
 |Like did those things mean different things in the
 |PDP10/ITS/TENEX world, uh like when I was a
 |real newbie, from the world in which I am now inwhich
 |is Unix and its flavours. For more fun remember
 |what the word "preempt" meant in Multics and what
 |"You are Protected from Preemptipon" really means.
 |
 |So perhaps one should look at what these words mean
 |in various technical contexts. A little technical dictionary
 |would be a great idea as these words come up time and
 |again in various situations. To me it was being able to read
 |through things and see the terms and have them mean
 |something to me and "get the gist" of things that convinces
 |me I am on the way to understanding things.
 |
 |I think/feel this applies to a whole variety of technical
 |fields. I mean I could prepare a bunch of words like that
 |from biology and medicine like "sense" and "anti-sense"
 |among others. I mean there should be a T-shirt that says
 |"anti-sense is not nonsense!"
 |
 |Not none of this gets as weird as some version of
 |art jargon. I certainly like that and many people now
 |get what (dare I say "grok") the phrase "informed by"
 |means. Hmmm should I throw in the aesthetics folks
 |just for good measure here?
 |
 |Have Fun,
 |Sends Steve
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
 |with "unsubscribe freebsd-newbies" in the body of the message

-- 
 Ataualpa Albert Carmo Braga            atabraga@iqm.unicamp.br
                                        http://www.iqm.unicamp.br
######################################################################
#     "Work is the refuge of people who have nothing better to do."  # 
#                                  Oscar Wilde                       #
######################################################################



To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
with "unsubscribe freebsd-newbies" in the body of the message




Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?15985.58547.723458.569198>