https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_la ... guage_myth
Most important literature written in German are the DIN norms

Ohh Wodan is getting pissed I like it...
Actually if you find a CT11 and desolder that too...
Naaw I am serious, I would love to see that list and I think there was even as thread here somewhere about such a list.
I'm pretty sure a "final" list would never be agreed upon and I'm not sure you would not comply with any list.Wodan wrote:Naaw I am serious, I would love to see that list and I think there was even as thread here somewhere about such a list.
Desoldering CT11 is a pain because all the switches are plate mount
off-topic-f10/iucn-red-list-for-keyboards-t15540.html
Well here I am posting in public
German never made any sense to me until I was bought the Klingon Dictionary as a present, and read it. That was after the last of my German classes at school, so it was too late, but suddenly German all made sense.
Daniel Beardsmore wrote:German never made any sense to me until I was bought the Klingon Dictionary as a present, and read it. That was after the last of my German classes at school, so it was too late, but suddenly German all made sense.
The two languages aren't similar at all; I'm guessing that Marc Okrand managed to explain grammar in a way that I could understand. English is "simple" in that it's sloppy; for example, the same words are used regardless of their function in the sentence. I can be drawing a drawing. "drawing" doesn't change spelling between being a verb and a noun. I wouldn't be surprised if being clear and precise in English is much harder than in German.
We also don't have grammatical gender. I have no idea what that's all about.
Of course I believe you. I can only imagine how difficult it must be for any Chinese to "adapt" to English.Mr.Nobody wrote: @seebart
What if I tell you Chinese words have no form variations whatsoever at all, a word can be a noun, a verb, an adective, an adverb, a preposition, completely depends on what you want it to be and its position in the sentence; really free to use...and we have no tenses, no gender, no plural, no countable or uncountable no third person... you got the idea...still laws and contracts are written in Chinese, I think it's okay. This explains why it's hard for Chinese to learn Indo-european languages, too many damn "unnecessary troubles" in grammar...if gender in French or Spanish gives English speaker a headache, imagine what a hell of headache English gives to Chinese learners...
As a backend developer I hate to deal with any sort of date format faggotry... Timestamp in milliseconds is what I want! I don't care about time zones, don't care about formatting, don't care about special wishes. All that belongs to the Frontend guys. Numbers are sortable, selectable, can be part of a select statement without suffering too much with dates, It's easy to migrate between databases, I can use logical operators instead of some bullshit formatting.002 wrote: Here we say it as it's written (dd/MM/yyyy) but we add 'of' between day and month generally:
11th *of* September, 2001
yyyy/MM/dd is preferred for anything involving computers / programming I'd say because it can be sorted without fuck-arsing around. It would be stupid to speak the date like that though. If someone asks you what the date is and you give them the year first (or even at all) you will be viewed as a dipshit. Even giving the month is superfluous in most cases.
In case you find anything with Topre switches: Keep calm, send it to me I will take care of it!Wodan wrote:Naaw I am serious, I would love to see that list and I think there was even as thread here somewhere about such a list.
Desoldering CT11 is a pain because all the switches are plate mount
off-topic-f10/iucn-red-list-for-keyboards-t15540.html
Maybe it's dubbed "pauper's language" because the French-speaking conqueror wanted to belittle the local English-speaking folks, you know in ancient time, everything had to be related to classes. If Hitler won the WW2, the whole world would speak German now, and all other languages could be called inferior languages