How dashed inconsiderate of johnney foriegner to want name files using esoteric, descriptive terms
That was exactly my point: the problem arises because
software has to identify the files with the same
filenames that the users have to use. The demands
on what can be put in a filename are not going to
stop with relatively sane things like a larger
character set. The filename, because it is used
directly by users as an expression of the file's
contents, will eventually
be expected to be able to include, among other things,
symbols that are not included in Unicode, including
custom symbols that the user just made up and drew.
Users will want files to be represented also with
animations. And on it goes. All of that would be
relatively reasonable, if it were just the user
interface. On the Mac, ordinary data files can
have their own icons attached to them, but that is
pretty limited, because you've only got so many
pixels to play with. On MS Windows and most
Unices, you don't even have that.
The problem with putting arbitrary things in the
filename is *not* a problem of allowing the user
to describe the file with arbitrary information.
The problem is that the filename is not just the
user-side file description medium:
it's also the program's interface. That means every
time any ability gets added to the interface, every
single application -- even behind-the-scenes apps
like the ones in server space -- has to be reworked
to support it. Unicode characters are only the
beginning.
Much of this pain could be avoided if the
representation shown in the file manager and the
file selection dialog boxes were separate from the
file identifier used by programs to identify the file.
Presumably many command-line users would probably
choose to specify files by their identifiers rather
than by their representation, because the identifier
would probably usually be easier to type, but there's
no reason they couldn't be given the option to specify
them by the representation if they so choose, if it's
something they can find a way to type somehow. But
why should GUI users be limited to only using file
representations that can be typed? That would be an
aweful lot like insisting that the Chinese stick to
filenames that only contain ASCII characters. Either
way, you're imposing a limitation on users because of
an implementation detail that is unimportant to the
users -- and when the users decide they're not willing
to put up with it anymore, then you make chaos for
all the programmers as they have to fix all the
software to stop making assumptions about how file
identifiers are structured.
Allowing more things to be put in filenames isn't
going to solve the problem. Allowing spaces to be
put in filenames didn't solve the problem; allowing
Unicode characters is just more of the same band-aid.
The only real solution is to separate the concept of
a file identifier, which programs use to identify the
file, from the concept of a representation that the
user specifies and uses to keep track of what the
file is about. Having the two be the same stopped
making sense when people who weren't programmers
started using computers.
Sanity? Oh, yeah, I've got all kinds of sanity. In fact, I've developed whole new kinds of sanity. Why, I've got so much sanity it's driving me crazy.
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