greetings iain. thanx a lot to your correction: interrupter => interpreter. i am very lucky to be corrected that before i use it to my co-workers. it's embarrassing, but 'interrupter' sounds me a very good explanation of its role. anyway, it is true that i am bad at reading english. and much gratitude to you for many valuable information. especially, "MAJIDE!". ( MAJI-SSUKA? = really true? ) -- <name species-designation="5618" default-lang="ja_JP">SHIGETOMI,Takuhiko</name> <contact medium="email">tshiget1 / gw.nsw.co.jp</contact> <location federational-alias="/galaxy/alpha-quadrant/sector-001/earth/"> /void/3d/universe/milkyway-galaxy/orion's-arm/sol-solar-system/3rd-planet/fareast/jp/tky/ </location> <hail>resistance is futile.</hail> > > > SHIGETOMI, Takuhiko wrote: > > greetings, Jim. :-) > > > > thanx to your quick reply. > > oh, it's authorized name is... 'Berkeley shebang hack' / 'Berkeley #! hack'. > > and the name of the followings to the #! is called 'interrupter'. > > good, good, that' much more than I'd like to know. thank you. > > > > let me explain the background of this question. > > yesterday, i participated a conference/meeting regarding of light-weight > > languages ( of course including ruby ), and found that one of the most > > skilful guys does not know how to pronounce it. > > many of japanese programmers call it 'sharp BIKKURI'. > > 'BIKKURI' means 'surprise' in japanese. > > and, i found myself that do not know how to "write" it in flat english. > > by the way, a 'BIKKURI' in english is an exclamation mark. exclamation > is like "MAJIDE!", so yeah, if you were to describe these two symbols > just in english, it would: > > '#' = 'pound sign' in america, 'hash symbol' in britain or australia > '!' = exclamation mark or exclamation point (exclamation is the noun of > the verb 'to exclaim') > > cheers > > iain