On Sun, 1 Apr 2018, Sandra Loosemore wrote: >> Our docs currently are about even and I think it would be good to >> settle on one? >> >> % grep "filename" $GCC/gcc/doc/*.texi | wc -l >> 92 >> % grep "file name" $GCC/gcc/doc/*.texi | wc -l >> 103 >> >> (Once we have consensus, I'll add that to codingconventions.html >> and start by making the web pages consistent.) >> > The C and C++ standards documents use "file name"; there are other places > ("bit-field") where the GCC manual has adopted the C standard terminology. > > In this case it might be more appropriate to adopt the POSIX conventions, > since I suspect most of the uses in the GCC documentation refer to the host > environment rather than the target language. This looks like the POSIX > glossary: > > http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap03.html > > Here "filename" is given as the correct spelling, except that that glossary > distinguishes between "filename" and "pathname" (a "filename" is the same as a > "pathname component"). So perhaps many of the "file name"/"filename" uses in > the GCC manual ought to be "pathname" instead?
On Mon, 2 Apr 2018, Joseph Myers wrote: > See the GNU Coding Standards: > > Please do not use the term ``pathname'' that is used in Unix > documentation; use ``file name'' (two words) instead. We use the term > ``path'' only for search paths, which are lists of directory names. Based on this it appears "file name" is the one to follow, so I went ahead and documented this at https://gcc.gnu.org/codingconventions.html with a patch at https://gcc.gnu.org/pipermail/gcc-cvs-wwwdocs/2023/010210.html . Should we strive to use pathname (or path name) more broadly as Sandra wondered? I'm a bit hesitant... My next step is updating wwwdocs to consistently use "file name. Thoughts? Gerald