| Spanky the Leprechaun |
I asked a techie friend about it elsewhere (facebook) and some said "sequel," some said "ess queue ell," and then people started going at it a little bit. It cracked me up because the damndest things can stir up shit.
So I said, "hell. I'll just wait until my Prof. says it then say it like she does."
Like, in school they told me to pronounce "finance" like "shark's fin" instead of "dang but Jo Bob's old lady sure is fine," also I was cautioned about "new kyew lurr...."
So I was just wondering and all.
| Hawkmoon269 |
SQL stands for Structured Query Language. But it was originally called SEQUEL for Structured English QUery Language. But the acronym SEQUEL was trademarked. So it was changed to SQL. Hence why some still refer to it as sequel. Both pronunciations of the acronym are generally acceptable.
rooboy
|
As a DBA, we use it when speaking to each other like, all the time.
Usually I hear "Sequel", but I've heard a few people use SQL (usually Linux people, but that's hardly a representative sample).
However, I have noticed that people who prefer it one way, they really prefer it their way, and they will argue at length about it.
| Ambrosia Slaad |
I've never met anyone who called it 'sequel' other than Microsoft employees. So personally, I go with S-Q-L.
I've heard it pronounced both "Es Que El" and "Sequel," but it was only the Microsoft reps and our company's own employees with MSCE/MSCP certs that pronounced it "Sequel."
However, once this movie came out, I started calling it "Squeakquel," which seemed to universally irritate everyone... so I still call it that.