On 7/12/06, Smylers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
David Landgren writes:

> Expected and actual has a long tradition in scientific endeavour,

And are still sucky as they are different lengths meaning the two
outputs are offset on the screen making it harder to see the failure.

They strike me as the teams most intuitively recognizable and least open
to misinterpretation.

I think its more important to instantly see the difference between two
simple outputs than it is to use the most absolutely appropriate
terms.

Also how can people misinterpret:

Want: X
Have: Y

Cheers,
Yves

--
perl -Mre=debug -e "/just|another|perl|hacker/"

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