On Sun, Nov 23, 2014 at 11:27:51PM -0800, Junio C Hamano wrote:

> Was the change to the test to use Cyrillic really necessary, or did it
> suffice if you simply extended the existsing "Funny Name" spelled with
> strange accents, but you substituted the whole string anyway?
> 
> Until I found out what the new string says by running web-based
> translation on it, I felt somewhat uneasy. As I do not read
> Cyrillic/Russian, we may have been adding some profanity without
> knowing. It turns out that the string just says "Cyrillic Name", so I am
> not against using the new string, but it simply looked odd to replace the
> string whole-sale when you merely need a longer string. It made it look
> as if a bug was specific to Cyrillic when it wasn't.

I do not mind hidden Cyrillic profanity[1], but I found the new text
much harder to verify, because the shapes are very unfamiliar to my
eyes. I'd prefer if we can stick to accented Roman letters.  I realize
this is me being totally Anglo-centric. But for Cyrillic readers,
consider how much more difficult it would be to manually verify the test
if it were written in an unfamiliar script (e.g., Hangul).  The
surrounding code is already written in Roman characters (and English),
so it probably makes sense as a common denominator.

-Peff

[1] As long as it is only crude and not mean. :)
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