On Nov 7, 2014, at 7:42 AM, Dave Angel <da...@davea.name> wrote:
> 
> Bob Martin <bob.mar...@excite.com> Wrote in message:
>> in 730867 20141107 093651 c...@isbd.net wrote:
>>> Darren Chen <ccylily1...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>> 在 
>>>> 2014年11月5日星期三UTC+8下午8时17分11秒,larry....@gmail.com写道:
>>>>> On Wed, Nov 5, 2014 at 7:13 AM, Ivan Evstegneev <webmailgro...@gmail.com> 
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>> Firtst of all thanks for reply.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> brackets [] means that the argument is optional.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> That's what I'm talking about (asking actually), where do you know it 
>>>>>> from?
>>>>> 
>>>>> I know it because I've been a programmer for 39 years.
>>>> 

But, to get back to the OP’s original question.  The earliest manuals that I 
remember looking at (from DEC, remember them) all had sections in the front 
that listed the typological conventions used throughout the manual.  Those 
included the use of square brackets to indicate optional arguments.  Eventually 
some of those conventions, including [ ] and the use of a fixed width font to 
indicate screen output, became so wide spread as to be simply part of the 
cultural context.  

A fair number of “Introduction to . . .” programming books still have such a 
section.

Bill

>>>> that's awesome!!
>>> 
>>> Well I started in 1971 or thereabouts.
>> 
>> 1959 for me ;-)
>> 
> 
> Approximately 1968 for me. I wrote programs in 1967, but didn't
> get to run them till 1968.
> -- 
> DaveA
> 
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