- orthography - Real time, real-time or realtime - English Language . . .
Which of real time, real-time and realtime is correct when you are talking about seeing something as it happens?
- on time vs. on-time - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I'm in the "on-time" camp when it comes to describing, for example, delivering something by the deadline Is this the correct usage?
- Timestep, time step, time-step: Which variant to use?
When I google "derivative timestep," I get many entries for "time step," but I don't get any with "timestep" on the first page I do get "time-step," once Googling "derivative timestamp" gives a different set of pages, which are not about calculus but about web forum management and such (checking timestamps on posts that are "derivative") This confirms what I know about the word "timestamp
- nouns - Runtime, run time, and run-time - English Language . . .
The CLR under NET is referred to as the "Common Language Runtime " It seems that the convention is "runtime" for a noun and "run-time" for the adjective Is this correct or should it be "runtime"
- What is the correct title for someone who gives podcasts?
To avoid a term suggestive of "iPod", some use the term netcast instead of podcast, such as the TWiT tv podcaster Leo Laporte (though the older term is also used in the broader sense of any internet-delivered realtime media transmission) Although netcaster sounds like someone who works on a fishing trawler
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