Moderator:JackFrost
kindofblue525 wrote:And when I write "aaaask" I don't mean "a" as in "bake", but the weird American "a". Almost like a combination between "ah" and "eh".
It's hard to describe that sound.
secretGeek on CodingHorror wrote:Type inference is not a gateway drug to more dynamically typed languages.
Rather "var" is a gateway drug toward "real" type inferencing, of which var is but a tiny cigarette to the greater crack mountain!
Travis B. wrote:kindofblue525 wrote:And when I write "aaaask" I don't mean "a" as in "bake", but the weird American "a". Almost like a combination between "ah" and "eh".
It's hard to describe that sound.
I assume you mean [æ] rather than [ɑ] or [a] here by such.
kindofblue525 wrote:Travis B. wrote:kindofblue525 wrote:And when I write "aaaask" I don't mean "a" as in "bake", but the weird American "a". Almost like a combination between "ah" and "eh".
It's hard to describe that sound.
I assume you mean [æ] rather than [ɑ] or [a] here by such.
I suppose so, yes. I'm not at all versed in the lingo. It would probably help to learn it, wouldn't it?
secretGeek on CodingHorror wrote:Type inference is not a gateway drug to more dynamically typed languages.
Rather "var" is a gateway drug toward "real" type inferencing, of which var is but a tiny cigarette to the greater crack mountain!
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests