
Every language has its idioms where a word-by-word translation would be misleading. Even communities have this, and programming is no exception. "Boilerplate" is a term from the programming community, and you simply have to learn its meaning in programming - just as the meanings of "the program knows", "bus", "keyboard", "tree", etc. etc. pp. Am 15.05.19 um 03:46 schrieb The FLOSS Information:
I think the proposed term is less confusing because the other term has more than one meaning in our language and it's a little hard to decide which one is right. 14.05.2019, 20:06, "Richard O'Keefe"
: I'm more confused by "get rid of repetitive code" than by "scrap your boilerplate". On Tue, 14 May 2019 at 17:53, Ivan Lazar Miljenovic
mailto:ivan.miljenovic@gmail.com> wrote: On Tue, 14 May 2019 at 11:13, The FLOSS Information
mailto:theflossinformation@yandex.com> wrote: Scrap your boilerplate Can you write the synonyms of the words in this sentence? I think that such a method is necessary to avoid meaning confusion.
Get rid of repetitive code? Is that what you were after?