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Comments
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I concur wholeheartedly! My eyeballs hurry when I read "a code", or "these codes". With that said, I have seen the form "codes" in serious computer literature so I'm not so sure the whole world agrees with us. But then again, I'm not a native english speaker, and that fact might have applied to the authors of said literature as well.
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iAmNaN71318yNot all people speak English as their primary language. I work with quite a few off-shore developers who do a pretty amazing job with the language, given it isn't their native tongue.
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@shivakrishna9
That's not a sentence. It's a predicate without a subject.
You could say "A grammar nazi has been spotted" or "I've spotted a grammar nazi."
Also, for god's sake, start your sentence with a capital letter. -
I used to only see "codes" used ironically. Nowadays, I see it used seriously much more often.
I usually just chalk it up to a dialectical difference -- similar to how British English refers to corporations in plural form ("Google are...")
Guys! It's 'code' NOT 'codes'.
I check the newbie's code. [correct]
I check the newbie's codes. [not correct]
Programmers write 'code'. It's an uncountable noun so we cannot pluralize it.
Spies use 'codes'.
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