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Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 24 8:11 pm)
What d'you expect from a nation that can't spell colour? ;)
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
SamTherapy posted at 6:53AM Thu, 15 August 2019 - #4359433
What d'you expect from a nation that can't spell colour? ;)
We can spell it. Just not the wrong way, like you Brits, Sam. But what can you expect from a nation that drives on the wrong side of the road?
Hope you know, I'm just funning.
Pretty sure they came up with the language first
I'll just be here siding with the french folks because latin-derived language friendship. (And you all should be thankful you don't have to learn portuguese.)
- - - - - -
Feel free to call me Ohki!
Poser Pro 11, Poser 12 and Poser 13, Windows 10, Superfly junkie. My units are milimeters.
Persephone (the computer): AMD Ryzen 9 5900x, RTX 3070 GPU, 96gb ram.
EClark1894 posted at 3:13PM Thu, 15 August 2019 - #4359437
SamTherapy posted at 6:53AM Thu, 15 August 2019 - #4359433
What d'you expect from a nation that can't spell colour? ;)
We can spell it. Just not the wrong way, like you Brits, Sam. But what can you expect from a nation that drives on the wrong side of the road?
Hope you know, I'm just funning.
Of course I do.
There are, however, good reasons for driving on the correct - left - side. Seeing as most of us have manual gears, driving on the left leaves the dominant hand (for most people) on the wheel most of the time.
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
I'm only replying to this thread again because I forgot to uncheck the "Notify me" option so I'll make sure I do it now.
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
In all seriousness, joking aside, if you're going to give this guy a French name, make sure you're actually, you know, using proper French when you do. Calling him "Le Homme" makes one sound like the Julie Brown character in Earth Girls are Easy.
docandraider.com -- the collected cartoons of Doc and Raider
SeanMartin posted at 12:12PM Thu, 15 August 2019 - #4359486
In all seriousness, joking aside, if you're going to give this guy a French name, make sure you're actually, you know, using proper French when you do. Calling him "Le Homme" makes one sound like the Julie Brown character in Earth Girls are Easy.
That should be "Incredibly Easy!"
I think Brit vernacular would have been better. Should have called him "The Bloke".
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
AmbientShade posted at 7:34PM Thu, 15 August 2019 - #4359502
DOA sounds a bit more fitting, as he'll get about as much attention as the last half dozen male figures that have been released for Poser. While they're at it, should change the name of the software to T&A
So young and yet so cynical.
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
Penguinisto posted at 6:24PM Thu, 15 August 2019 - #4359535
So who has the fortitude to mesh-up one of these for the new figures?
Hey, a box on wheels!
FVerbaas posted at 8:47PM Thu, 15 August 2019 - #4359526
The apostrophe does not go well with file names. I have previously opted for 'le Mec'.
Then you might as well go all the way and name him Le Beau Mec.
Then wait for someone to catch on.
docandraider.com -- the collected cartoons of Doc and Raider
This raises a point I'd like people's opinion on. Are we really stuck with so many prohibited characters in file names these days? As far as current operating systems go, and support for, at the very least, European languages with diacritical marks on characters, why are there still prohibitions on certain characters? Apart from the obvious ones like path separators (/:), drive letter and extension delimiters (:.) across the OSs Poser supports (perhaps Linux, too, in a century or three), why do we still have archaic restrictions like 32 character file names, when the underlying operating systems no longer have such limits.
Where does an apostrophe or double-quotes fall down in file name conventions? All of the net programming languages like JSON and HTML have means of escaping delimiters or translating them into byte-code notation, like %20 for a space. The worst trouble I have with single apostrophes is that my text editor of choice, BBEdit doesn't have a simple way of identifying parts of the Poser syntax which might contain a file name (if it's not delimited, as is common in poser scene files) that contains an unbalanced apostrophe as part of a file name, which it then assumes is the start of a string, thowing the syntax colouring out of whack. Poser itself has no such problem saving or loading a file which contains an unbalanced apostrophe as part of a file name.
Maybe it's a problem as part of the name of an actor or figure? A way around that might be to use another character which displays as an apostrophe, but has a different ASCII or UTF code, so doesn't identify as an apostrophe.
Thoughts???
Verbosity: Profusely promulgating Graham's number epics of complete and utter verbiage by the metric monkey barrel.
Or just call it Lhomme in the coding and let it go right there? The character can be called anything one likes, but if it's a coding concern, naming this mesh lhomme in the code is no big deal.
docandraider.com -- the collected cartoons of Doc and Raider
an0malaus posted at 6:35AM Fri, 16 August 2019 - #4359566
This raises a point I'd like people's opinion on. Are we really stuck with so many prohibited characters in file names these days? As far as current operating systems go, and support for, at the very least, European languages with diacritical marks on characters, why are there still prohibitions on certain characters? Apart from the obvious ones like path separators (/:), drive letter and extension delimiters (:.) across the OSs Poser supports (perhaps Linux, too, in a century or three), why do we still have archaic restrictions like 32 character file names, when the underlying operating systems no longer have such limits.
Unicode largely eliminated most of the bugaboos, but some chars are still used to get an intepreter or compiler's attention (example: the apostrophe (" ' ") is still used as an escape character in Powershell, bash, csh, ksh, tcsh; as a string delimiter in Python, Ruby, loads of other scripting languages, etc.) This means it's going to be prohibited for use as a filename or a directory name. Just the way it is - nothing to do with a 32-bit character limitation, but everything to do with how an OS, shell, script, or even lower-level code will interpret such characters as the interpreter comes across it.
Fun part is, you can escape the apostrophe and it will literally print just fine. Problem is, you, and everyone else who comes across, calls, or handles it would have to also remember to properly escape that symbol - under every circumstance, and every time, without fail.
As far as in a .cr2 file? lhomme works just fine, because nobody will ever see it. Marketing material can use apostrophes all day long. Overall, I see very little problem here... just a tiny bit of accommodation in the filenames and internal object descriptors.
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... may I remind you that it's not LE HOMME. It's L'HOMME.
Carry on.
docandraider.com -- the collected cartoons of Doc and Raider