On Mon, Nov 01, 2010 at 01:36:24PM +0100, Etienne Kneuss wrote:
> > It's the policy:
> > > There are two reasons this term will stay. It is a tip of the hat to
> > > the amount of PHP work that came out of Israel, and it is a good
> > >
> > > re
Oops, should've sent this to the list too.
- Forwarded message from Alexander Schrijver
-
Date: Mon, 1 Nov 2010 13:28:59 +0100
From: Alexander Schrijver
To: James Butler
Subject: Re: [PHP-DEV] RE: [SPAM] Re: [PHP-DEV] rename T_PAAMAYIM_NEKUDOTAYIM
to T_DOUBLE_COLON
User-Agent:
On Mon, Nov 01, 2010 at 12:59:54PM +0100, Stefan Marr wrote:
>
> On 01 Nov 2010, at 12:06, Alexander Schrijver wrote:
> > Its a minor change and an annoyance to a lot of people. Yes, by not changing
> > this you'r annoying thousands of people.
> Instead of going for
On Mon, Nov 01, 2010 at 10:58:36AM +0100, Dennis Haarbrink wrote:
> Come on people, what exactly is the problem with a once-in-a-lifetime
> investment of 5 seconds of your time to google some stupid error message.
> Something you, as a developer, spend your life doing.
>
> Please, stop complaini
On Sat, Oct 30, 2010 at 07:50:29PM -0500, Jack Timmons wrote:
> On Sat, Oct 30, 2010 at 3:10 PM, Chad Emrys wrote:
> > I'm not arguing about learning another culture. The argument is that an
> > error message that should be straight forward, isn't.
>
> You misunderstand my point.
>
> It isn't st
On Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 11:30:04PM -0700, Rasmus Lerdorf wrote:
> with unfamiliar terms every day. I wouldn't mind having a few more
> non-English identifiers in PHP actually.
I don't know if i can make suggestions as an outsider. However, i really like
the dutch language and it would be really c