>>
>>As far as programmers go, it really is a personal preference and there's nothing wrong with that. Go knock yourself out with case sensitivity if that's your preference <g>
>
>Why would I knock out myself with it? It's natural part of the language and doesn't require additional effort to use.
>
>>When a case sensitive language has a public facing interface that enforces case sensitivity rules, it becomes a problem between an annoyance and a serious flaw, depending on the situation. Case in point: Unix -based webservers which will not recognize
http://www.northernlightssoftware.com/grantmanager.html to be the same as
http://www.northernlightssoftware.com/Grantmanager.html. Somebody looking for that kind of address would not get there unless it is typed exactly as it is stored in the server.
>
>You're confusing a programming language with OS in this case but it's totally different story anyway.
No. its the same mindset behind the idea.
Words are given to man to enable him to conceal his true feelings.
Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord
Weeks of programming can save you hours of planning.
OffThere is no place like [::1]