Cruft
crufty
[very common; origin unknown; poss. from `crusty' or `cruddy']
- Poorly built, possibly over-complex. The {canonical} example is "This is standard old crufty {DEC} software". In fact, one fanciful theory of the origin of crufty holds that was originally a mutation of `crusty' applied to DEC software so old that the `s' characters were tall and skinny, looking more like `f' characters.
- Unpleasant, especially to the touch, often with encrusted junk. Like spilled coffee smeared with peanut butter and catsup.
- Generally unpleasant.
- (sometimes spelled cruftie) n. A small crufty object (see {frob}); often one that doesn't fit well into the scheme of things. "A LISP property list is a good place to store crufties (or, collectively, {random} cruft)."
This term is one of the oldest in the jargon and no one is sure of its etymology, but it is suggestive that there is a Cruft Hall at Harvard University which is part of the old physics building; it's said to have been the physics department's radar lab during WWII. To this day (early 1993) the windows appear to be full of random techno-junk. MIT or Lincoln Labs people may well have coined the term as a knock on the competition.
Marcadores: Common, Cruft, Harvard, Microsoft, Software, University
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5/14/2009 06:31:00 PM,
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hack together:
[common] To throw something together so it will work. Unlike kluge together or {cruft together}, this does not necessarily have negative connotations.
Marcadores: Cruft, Hacking, Kluge
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5/14/2009 02:31:00 AM,
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