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- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!uknet!acorn!aoliver
- From: aoliver@acorn.co.uk (Ashley Oliver)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.acorn
- Subject: Re: OS differences and improvements
- Message-ID: <18294@acorn.co.uk>
- Date: 3 Sep 92 16:54:30 GMT
- References: <1992Sep3.105742.15810@cs.utwente.nl>
- Sender: aoliver@acorn.co.uk
- Organization: Acorn Computers Ltd, Cambridge, England
- Lines: 51
-
- In article <1992Sep3.105742.15810@cs.utwente.nl> kortink@cs.utwente.nl (John Kortink) writes:
-
- >steve@acorn.co.uk (Steve "daffy" Hunt) writes :
- >
- >>[...]
- >>As far as the choice of command names goes, I once saw an interesting
- >>paper in the proceedings of some HCI conference or other. It
- >>presented the results of a study into how easy people found it to
- >>memorise command names. They found no significant difference between
- >>memorability of "obvious" versus "abstract" names.
- >
- >That's the most sensible thing I have heard yet in this never-ending
- >boring argument about 'good' or 'bad' command names.
- >
- Absolutely! The big single step in coming to grips with IT ( or for that
- matter much of philosophy, mathematics, ...) is realizing
- that symbols have absolutely no inherent semantic content.
- "C'est ne pas un pipe" for art lovers, or 'the map is not the territory'
- for sf-lovers.
-
- In any case, surely it is only an issue at all on OSses that don't have
- any form of aliasing. Hands up everyone who has something like...
-
- set alias$cd dir %%0
- set alias$ls %cat %%0
- set alias$cat root:bin.scripts.cat %%*0
- set alias$. %cat %%*0
- set alias$rm wipe %%*0
- set alias$mkdir cdir %%0
- set alias$more type %%0
- set alias$ln mklink %%0
-
- ... in their boot file. Surely the real point is that the *individual*
- user want the command 'squiggle' to do the same(-ish) thing on all thirteen
- architectures/OSses that he uses daily... You're only stuck if there's no
- aliasing. I don't want to learn an OS's command set - I want it to learn mine!
-
- True, the newly user will not want to get involved with aliases, !Boot files, or
- whatever. But that freshly minted a user usually has very few preconceptions
- about what commands 'ought' to be in any case (you try explaining why a collection
- of files is called a directory, and why it's abbreviated 'dir' rather than 'di' or
- 'direct' or ...).
-
-
-
-
-
- -Ashley Oliver
- :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
- :Breac aig na h-uile fir-stiuiridh!!:
- :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
-