LOL... you got me on the Yoda-speak one, but a true English gentleman would know that there *is* one message and there *are* several messages :-D
On 10/10/12 20:11, Jussi Lahtinen wrote: > You could even translate it to "gentleman English". > > "you have &1 &2" --> "Good sir, there is &2 for you, actually &1 &2." > > Result would be example: > > "Good sir, there is messages for you, actually 99 messages." > > > Jussi > > > > > On Wed, Oct 10, 2012 at 9:08 PM, Jussi Lahtinen > <[email protected]>wrote: > >> Still wouldn't work for Yoda-speak" >>> "29 messages have you" :-) >>> >> Wrong, this would work. >> >> Code was: >> >> Print Subst(("you have &1 &2"), x, IIf(x > 1, ("messages"), ("message"))) >> >> And so, you would translate "you have &1 &2" to "&1 &2 have you". >> >> >> Jussi >> >> > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Don't let slow site performance ruin your business. Deploy New Relic APM > Deploy New Relic app performance management and know exactly > what is happening inside your Ruby, Python, PHP, Java, and .NET app > Try New Relic at no cost today and get our sweet Data Nerd shirt too! > http://p.sf.net/sfu/newrelic-dev2dev > _______________________________________________ > Gambas-user mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gambas-user > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Don't let slow site performance ruin your business. Deploy New Relic APM Deploy New Relic app performance management and know exactly what is happening inside your Ruby, Python, PHP, Java, and .NET app Try New Relic at no cost today and get our sweet Data Nerd shirt too! http://p.sf.net/sfu/newrelic-dev2dev _______________________________________________ Gambas-user mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gambas-user
