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Should have called it Progrämmchen, to also include umlauts Ü


A lot of programs break on Polish computers when you name your user "Użytkownik". Android studio and some compiler tools for example.


Ah, Polish. I love this movie scene, which I learned about here on HN some time ago: "Grzegorz Brzęczyszczykiewicz" -- https://youtu.be/AfKZclMWS1U



My grandfather has a similarly complicated name, although his is Russian. Just a river of "zh" and "sch" and "sh" sounds.


That 1:19 clip was quite good actually. Thanks for the laugh :)


that's fantastic. thanks.


When I was at Microsoft, one test pass used pseudolocale (ps-PS IIRC) to catch all different weird things so this should have Just Worked (TM), but I was in Windows Server team so client SKUs may have been tested differently. Unfortunately I don't remember how Program Files were called in that locale and my Google-fu is failing me now.


As I recall pseudoloc is just randomly picking individual characters to substitute that look like the Latin letters to keep it readable for testing, so it would be something like рг (Cyrillic) ο (Greek)... etc, and can change from run to run. It would also artificially pad or shorten terms to catch cases where the (usually German) term would be much longer or a (usually CJK) term would be much shorter and screw up alignment or breaks.


I seem to remember that it was mostly adding various accent marks / umlauts / etc. to English words so things were indeed readable but I'm not going to bet any money on that as I didn't have to actually log in onto those machines super frequently.


Yeah, there were definitely ö and û and © and stuff too, just anything outside the normal 0x20-0x7E.




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