On Mon, Jul 02, 2007 at 01:48:52PM -0700, Alan Dayley wrote: > Carlos Macedo Gomes wrote: > > > > I like these laws even better: > > > > George's Laws on Programming > > > > 1. There is no such thing as a programming bug. A bug was the moth that > > Grace Hopper pulled out of her vacuum tube computer. What programmers > > like to call bugs are defects - defects in workmanship - defects in > > quality. > > A rose by any other name... > > Why do you feel it is important that defects are not called bugs? If I can jump in with my own answer... If bugs are something that happened now and then, and everyone had a chuckle and then they got fixed, then it really wouldn't matter. When defects are serious and/or numerous enough to plague the entire industry it's a different matter. The difference between a "bug" and a "defect" is that bugs happen. Bugs "get into" the software. Defects are caused by people. They are mistakes. Someone causes a defect. So to continue calling them bugs is to perpetuate a mindset that accepts them as something we just have to live with. The darned little critters just crawl into the code! -- Darrin Chandler | Phoenix BSD User Group | MetaBUG dwchandler@stilyagin.com | http://phxbug.org/ | http://metabug.org/ http://www.stilyagin.com/ | Daemons in the Desert | Global BUG Federation --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss