me22 wrote:> One of the nicer project names I've seen recently is Alexandria, for a > book database program ( http://alexandria.rubyforge.org/ ). It > unfortunately fails the searchability test, but does brilliantly at > reminding you what it is.Along these lines, is there any mythical characters or historical persons which are associated with translation (which is the primary role of a compiler framework)? I can only think of 'Babel', but I'm sure there must be some other possibilities... m.
All I can contribute is "Takoa", which is Finnish for forge. It's available as a .org. -- Christopher Lamb -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20070413/afdc891b/attachment.html>
> Along these lines, is there any mythical characters or historical persons which are associated with translation (which > is the primary role of a compiler framework)? I can only think of 'Babel', but I'm sure there must be some other > possibilities...There's always Thoth, the ancient Egyptian god attributed with the invention of writing. Talking of history, we could call LLVM the "Analytical Engine", AE for short. Ciao, Duncan.
I don't like very much mithology or fantasy names. A portmanteau is more professional (even if it sounds funny). For now IMHO the best proposal is Omnipiler and OmniC, even if the last one reminds too much of C. Maybe Omnic (with the lowercase c), or Omnip are better. Simple, elegant and somehow reminds of something technological (to me at least :P). So my idea is to list some key words and see if some nice portmanteau came out :) Wordlist: code, source, byte, compiler, optimizer, toolkit, language, assembler, machine, engine, translation (general llvm related terms) screwdriver (a generic helpful tool just like LLVM is) plasticine (gives the idea of modellability) fun (llvm is fun :P) matic, omni, over, uber, iper, etc. lego (the idea of modularity, or "building complex things with simple pieces") etc So it could be: omnisource, legolang, transource, screwpiler, plastibyte, uberlang, oversource, optimatic, etc, etc. Ok, ok, i'm quitting :) On 4/13/07, Morten Ofstad <morten at hue.no> wrote:> me22 wrote: > > One of the nicer project names I've seen recently is Alexandria, for a > > book database program ( http://alexandria.rubyforge.org/ ). It > > unfortunately fails the searchability test, but does brilliantly at > > reminding you what it is. > > Along these lines, is there any mythical characters or historical persons which are associated with translation (which > is the primary role of a compiler framework)? I can only think of 'Babel', but I'm sure there must be some other > possibilities... > > m. > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu > http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev >
On Apr 13, 2007, at 4:30 AM, Nicola Lugato wrote:> I don't like very much mithology or fantasy names. A portmanteau is > more professional (even if it sounds funny). > For now IMHO the best proposal is Omnipiler and OmniC, even if the > last one reminds too much of C. Maybe Omnic (with the lowercase c), or > Omnip are better. Simple, elegant and somehow reminds of something > technological (to me at least :P). > > So my idea is to list some key words and see if some nice portmanteau > came out :) > Wordlist: > code, source, byte, compiler, optimizer, toolkit, language, assembler, > machine, engine, translation (general llvm related terms) > screwdriver (a generic helpful tool just like LLVM is) > plasticine (gives the idea of modellability) > fun (llvm is fun :P) > matic, > omni, over, uber, iper, etc. > lego (the idea of modularity, or "building complex things with > simple pieces")Pretty sure this is a registered trademark.> etc > > So it could be: omnisource, legolang, transource, screwpiler, > plastibyte, uberlang, oversource, optimatic, etc, etc. > > Ok, ok, i'm quitting :) > > > On 4/13/07, Morten Ofstad <morten at hue.no> wrote: >> me22 wrote: >>> One of the nicer project names I've seen recently is Alexandria, >>> for a >>> book database program ( http://alexandria.rubyforge.org/ ). It >>> unfortunately fails the searchability test, but does brilliantly at >>> reminding you what it is. >> >> Along these lines, is there any mythical characters or historical >> persons which are associated with translation (which >> is the primary role of a compiler framework)? I can only think of >> 'Babel', but I'm sure there must be some other >> possibilities... >> >> m. >> _______________________________________________ >> LLVM Developers mailing list >> LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu >> http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev >> > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu > http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev