Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by plorkyeran 4609 days ago
It has always annoyed me that "world wide web" is significantly faster to say than "www".
2 comments

Yes but is great fun seeing people say out web address's. Ah the early days when they spelt out the http:// part as well.

If it was realy a bother though somebody would of pulled a Prince and called it squiggle.

ALl this though is based upon English use of the letter W, sure other languages have there own quirks and idiosims.

* Would have pulled a Prince
Completely off topic here, but why is it that people some times write "would of" instead of "would have"? Is it something you would use in spoken language? And where?
Good question and I'll put it down to my constant logic fight with English (my native language though it is most illogical for people with aspergers) and I would also admit this is what I say. With that it could be deemed slang usage perhaps. But a valid question and something I'm now going to be more mindful about, though I still have no golden answear as too why it comes about.
Would have is abbreviated "would've", which is pronounced similarly. I expect people get it from hearing that before seeing it written.
You may very well be right. I use it without thinking and with that I suppose it is a form of slang variation in usage. Though my grammer and spelling are below par and I do find my native English language a fun feild of rules with so many exceptions that if it was code it would be the worst code ever. That and even today we still do not have a definitive grammer/spell checker that can understand all context and usage. Yet we can put a man on the moon and develop advanced AI that gets better every day.

Though I'm starting too feel that you may be right in how this permutation of words originated, given language accents and localisations pre internet days.

Thanks. If you also use it in speech, then it strongly suggests that it's simply because would've sounds similar to would of. To humour me, would you mind saying where you're from?
Makes sense, I suppose. I was wondering if there was more to it (E.g. a cultural artefact), but I suppose not then.
Personally I try to make most of my servers work without the www. part, it's also a hassle to type.