๐Ÿ”Œ๐Ÿ’˜๐Ÿถ is a user on cybre.space. You can follow them or interact with them if you have an account anywhere in the fediverse.

hi i'm a software engineer and i worked in the web for a good 8 years before i ever realized what the abbreviations i18n and l10n (internationalization and localization) stood for

literally i knew what they were *about*, but thought the numbers had something to do with some funky standards body or some shit

numeronyms of this form are bad so so so so bad don't
just
don't

@tcql I don't understand why anyone ever thought they were a good idea.

๐Ÿ”Œ๐Ÿ’˜๐Ÿถ @USBloveDog

@djsundog @InspectorCaracal @tcql
1. USB doesnโ€™t get spelled out
2. There arenโ€™t regional spelling differences in Universal Serial Bus

ยท Amaroq ยท 0 ยท 0

@USBloveDog @InspectorCaracal @tcql
1. then why do the words exist
2. this argument doesn't apply to accessibility which gets the same shitty abbreviation tactic

@djsundog @InspectorCaracal @tcql

1. Those are three shorter words which are all used fairly often in different contexts. Even if usb has no inherent meaning, weโ€™d still use the words universal, serial, and bus
2. I completely agree the a11y is complete BS. The biggest pros of I18n are that it reminds you that strings lengths can vary wildly between languages and that you canโ€™t make assumptions about what is a valid letter.

@USBloveDog @InspectorCaracal @tcql it doesn't remind me of either of those things. it reminds me we habitually overcomplicate our jargon. :)

@USBloveDog @djsundog @tcql ... then why are you defining the word by its length?? I'm even MORE confused by it existing now.