If you're asking for an explanation of the humour, then it's easy. There is no word play or a significant reference to a program only available to a special audience.

Seems to me that when Damian got to the end of his email he noticed that each sentence ended in a '?'

That's not usual. Most emails contain assertions and questions.

The humour is really when he appended a "?" to his own name. Was he really questioning what he was called?

Richard

On 08/23/2011 02:19 PM, philippe.beauch...@bell.ca wrote:
Help us always-explains-the-joke-man!!...
:)





Philippe R. Beauchamp
Secure Channel | Bell Business Markets
Associate Director - Application Services
Phone:           613-781-8953
Cell:                613-327-6928


----- Original Message -----
From: Moritz Lenz [mailto:mor...@faui2k3.org]
Sent: Tuesday, August 23, 2011 04:56 AM
To: perl6-language@perl.org<perl6-language@perl.org>
Subject: Re: [perl6/specs] a7cfe0: [S32] backtraces overhaul

Am 23.08.2011 10:46, schrieb Damian Conway:
It's a trivial point, but why hidden_from_backtrace instead of
hidden-from-backtrace? Especially given that the associated
method is is-hidden, not is_hidden?
The current stance seems to be that low-level things are spelled with
underscores, while we reserve the minus character for user-space code.
Try grepping the specs for identifiers of built-ins that have a minus in
it -- I didn't find any in a quick search.


And why is this entire message written in questions?
Is it? I'm afraid I don't understand what you mean.

See
https://github.com/perl6/specs/commit/a7cfe02002f665c120cf4b735919779820194757
maybe it's a charset problem on your machine, or something.

Cheers,
Moritz

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