| > Also - fuzzy search as mentioned. So was your edit on the comment I replied to (repeated below) a typo? > Edit: also, searching for "prolog web framework" gets you stuff about using prolog for web application development. So, yeah, naming is not great and your assertion is not entirely correct. This is an anecdote in favor of fuzzy search not really being an issue. > If someone tells me about this "prologue web framework" I could easily transliterate that as "prolog". If someone told me about that “C programming language” I could easily transliterate that as “sea” or misremember it as “B”. These are contrived situations. Imagine someone told me about “Prologue: a web framework written in Nim”, and I transliterated that to “prolog web framework”. If I searched that and it didn’t come up with a web framework written in Nim, I would think critically about the issue and change my search to “prolog web framework Nim” and would find this project. It would be so silly to change the name or avoid the name of a completely unrelated project when ideally anyone faced with the issue would have the critical thinking skills to adjust and refine their search terms so it was not an issue. |
So, it really depends on your search engine. Using 3 different ones, assuming my English spelling is less than stellar, only looking at the first page:
"Prolog Web framework"
Duck Duck Go/ Bing/ Google: all prolog
"Prologe Web framework"
Duck Duck Go: 5th hit is Prolog based
Bing: 7th hit is prolog
Google: first hit prolog
So yeah - there is a possibility of confusion.
> If someone told me about that “C programming language” I could easily transliterate that as “sea” or misremember it as “B”.
If you knew nothing about programming and technology. I counter that if someone told be about "Prologue" I would assume "Prolog". I wonder why "Nim" would come in to it? I don't know about you, but I don't go around saying "I wrote apps in MFC in C++ in the 90's", or "I write ASP.Net applications in C#". I think the framework stands alone, surely? The language is an implementation detail, and I guess Prologue might one day be ported to another platform if it is really all that good?
The issue is that your position is people something like - should be intelligent enough to know what is meant by a phrase. My position is that you are massively underestimating the issue with the words basically looking and sounding the same. Your attempt at a counter is a weak argument about how people might dramatically misremember facts anyway.
I think I looked at your history, and this is not the first time you got in to a debate like this, so I'm out... it's a bad name - the creator should probably rethink it or prefix "Nim" to make it unique, but whatever.