> > Very well written, a pleasure to read. > And very hard to translate! :)
Leaping off the immediate topic of computer language D into the realm of human languages English and Turkish... With the Sapir–Whorf hypothesis in the back of my mind... What makes it harder to translate? Is there a human language in which these concepts would be more easily discussed? I was always fascinated by early translations (1980 and before era) of Japanese machine manuals... It was tempting to find the mistranslations funny, until I realised... * You could never remember the words. Your memory is fundamentally governed by the language you speak. Thus when you try remember (and relate to a colleague) a subtly garbled chunk of that language, your brain autocorrects it and refuses to reproduce the mistakes! * The differences indicated curious and subtle differences in thought processes of the original authors and translators. Not better or worse processes. Different. Interesting. Subtle. * The categories of mistakes made by, say German German to English translators, were very different. So I have always been fascinated by Sapir-Whorf, but it seems to be very subtle and nuanced and unexpected in practical effect. On Thu, Jan 9, 2014 at 8:26 AM, Ali Çehreli <[email protected]> wrote: > On 01/08/2014 11:09 AM, Paolo Invernizzi wrote: > >> This one is a good introduction, or at least the best one I can remember: >> >> http://klickverbot.at/blog/2012/05/purity-in-d/ >> >> Very well written, a pleasure to read. > > And very hard to translate! :) In case a Turkish reader is interested, here > is the translation: > > http://ddili.org/makale/saflik.html > > Ali > -- John Carter Phone : (64)(3) 358 6639 Tait Electronics PO Box 1645 Christchurch New Zealand -- ------------------------------ This email, including any attachments, is only for the intended recipient. It is subject to copyright, is confidential and may be the subject of legal or other privilege, none of which is waived or lost by reason of this transmission. If you are not an intended recipient, you may not use, disseminate, distribute or reproduce such email, any attachments, or any part thereof. If you have received a message in error, please notify the sender immediately and erase all copies of the message and any attachments. Unfortunately, we cannot warrant that the email has not been altered or corrupted during transmission nor can we guarantee that any email or any attachments are free from computer viruses or other conditions which may damage or interfere with recipient data, hardware or software. The recipient relies upon its own procedures and assumes all risk of use and of opening any attachments. ------------------------------
