If you’re from a non English speaking country, do you first have to learn English if you want to get into programming?

  • Gumus@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I hate using Excel for this reason. ALMOST all functions are translated, so you’re never sure what to look for. If you find a solution for a problem online? Doesn’t work, you’d have to rewrite it in your language. And you can’t even switch the language in settings, because it’s tied to the OS language (maybe you can in recent versions, haven’t bothered to check for a while).

    • mcmoor@bookwormstory.social
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      10 months ago

      This is why I never touch language setting in any OS. It’s guaranteed I’ll have some problem down the line because I can’t search the problem or understand the solution if error crops up someday, because the menus are different.

      • taladar
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        10 months ago

        Error messages are a pain to search for when they are translated too.

        • dan@upvote.au
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          10 months ago

          This is why it’s good to have unique error codes in addition to messages. It also helps with error monitoring as you can aggregate errors by their error code rather than message (which can have variables in it, different languages, etc).

          • taladar
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            10 months ago

            Error codes can be useful but I find that a lot of vendors using them rely on the code too much to classify errors as identical. Usually the variables do matter, e.g. which file couldn’t be opened or which action was attempted by whom that got a permission denied error.

    • eRac@lemmings.world
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      10 months ago

      Not sure about VBA, but Excel formulas are actually saved in English and translated on file load. It doesn’t translate strings though, so EVALUATE only works for users with the same language as the author.