Christian Hesse <list@eworm.de> on Fri, 2016/11/11 21:34:
Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@archlinux.org> on Fri, 2016/11/11 21:23:
On Fri, 11 Nov 2016 at 21:15:48, Christian Hesse wrote:
From: Christian Hesse <mail@eworm.de>
'YES' translates to 'JA' in German, thus answer 'J' is expected for positive answer. This changes the behaviour to always accept 'Y' and 'N', in addition to the translated values.
Not sure whether it is a problem in practice but what happens if "N" is translated to "Y" in some language? Do we really want to accept if the user enters "Y" in that case?
A valid point... Does such a language exist?
Answering myself... Yes! So we definitely do *not* want this. Nevertheless... Learned some interesting facts about languages. :D -- main(a){char*c=/* Schoene Gruesse */"B?IJj;MEH" "CX:;",b;for(a/* Best regards my address: */=0;b=c[a++];) putchar(b-1/(/* Chris cc -ox -xc - && ./x */b/42*2-3)*42);}