- What is the correct term back-end, back end or backend?
The Ngram is misleading, as back end can refer to the literal back end of a town, or a house, or other things where you would not use backend Pairing it with developer or software or some such would be a closer approximation
- american english - For example VS for an example - English Language . . .
It's likely that "for example" is the correct phrase in this case, and is a widely used idiom in English, but it depends on what you want to say If you want to provide an example right then and there, you need to say "For example" or - if you really want to use the article - you could say "As an example" or "An example might be", or any such construct A sample sentence might be: For example
- Rollbacked or rolled back the edit? And what about double-click?
Tenses always apply to verbs, so to see where to apply it, you need to figure out which part of the compound (or hyphenated) word is the verb "Rollback" is a compound word, consisting of the verb "roll" and the preposition "back", as Peter indicated As such, "rolling" is what you are doing, and "back" indicates where you're rolling (as opposed to rolling forward) "Rollbacked" would imply
- $x USD vs. x USD: does the $ serve any purpose?
USD CAD AUD is the way to go for technical documents or backend databases For catalog pages, a good solution is to use $ in the price field and somewhere else on the page put an indication of currency and locale, like "USD" and the flag, since you're also indicating a willingness to ship to that place
- Polite way of asking for response as soon as possible
The formulation you quoted is not clear - the problem is not in the grammar of if, but in the misused vocab Your formulation where you explained what you meant: since the question is simple enough I wish to get answered as quickly as possible while rather blunt and not exactly polite is far easier to understand It is not really a matter of language, but I don't think that there is a polite
- End user vs. end-user — correct usage of hyphen
"end user" in my paper is used to refer to people who are not system administrators In the area that I am studying (computer networks), there are many systems not designed for end users, so I think it will be fine "The end user stands in contrast to users who support or maintain the product, [4] such as sysops, system administrators, database administrators, [5] information technology
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