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And here I always thought the classic combination of "foo" and "bar" came
from the military acronymn fubar . . .
-----Original Message-----
From: EMAIL:PROTECTED
[mailto:EMAIL:PROTECTED]On Behalf Of Mike Miller
Sent: Wednesday, October 01, 2003 4:22 PM
To: MLUG Off-Topic Discussion
Subject: [MLUG - DISCUSSION] foo -- the final answer
On Wed, 1 Oct 2003, Spurling, Shannon wrote:
> I think it came from the French derivation, IIRC, but I think it was
> from Fou, not Faux. I was talking about the WWII pilots account. I don't
> know where the comic strip came from, but I think it may have been post
> war.
Nope. It came from "foo" which was just a silly word used by a comic
strip writer. He found it on the bottom of a Chinese statue back in the
1930s, if not earlier. It might have been a transliteration of a Chinese
word for "happiness" or "prosperity." Read about it here:
http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html/F/foo.html
That's a nice reference, especially for computer-related uses of 'foo.'
More good stuff on foo here:
http://www.toonopedia.com/smokey.htm
http://www.ufx.org/foofighters/foo.htm
Mike
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