@Dharman ok, so I dug a bit into it and the original is a Brazilian folk song called "Boa Noite Povo". Here you can listen to it close to its purest form, an acapella accompanied by only a tambourine to mark the successive increase in tempo.
This is a contralto singer which is also a staple in feminine Brazilian singers like Ivette Sangalo.
You can hear her slowly approaching full power as the tempo increases.
The "Bakermat - Baianá" song you shared only samples 2 sentences. What it actually reminded me of was (and this has cult status) the scale in which the OST of Ghost in the Shell is sung.
So this is a proven formula for success. In the same influence I found it evocative of Bulgarian folklor
@Makyen Thanks, that fixed it. I have no idea how my userscript got lost. I was deferring a TamperMonkey upgrade for several days, and Chrome eventually disabled it, indicating that it was "corrupted". I re-enabled/updated the extension, and updated Chrome, which led to the cv-pls button no longer appearing. Anyway, thanks.
People marked it as opinionated but I do not think this is opinionated. In fact, there is more insightful thought behind this, and I would like someone to explain that
Therefore, would appreciate if someone can help me open this question
@TheWanderer why do you think there is insightful thought behind it and why do you expect anybody other than the original author to be able to explain their choices?
@TheWanderer I'm with Eric Lippert here and here. Your question is basically the same. Yes, it's not about language specification and design but just about what somebody thought when they came up with something. Perhaps CRUD is nothing more than a joke. Perhaps it was even random.
@snakecharmerb details or clarity rather than focus IMHO; the "more focus" close reason provides a message to the OP that they should "ask only one question" which isn't the problem here
Is there an SE site where such a history-of-terminology question would be on-topic?
General English etymology is on-topic on EL&U, but I'm not sure of their feelings on technical jargon that wouldn't be in a standard English dictionary. I sort of suspect it'd be off-topic there.
Basically my opinion on the question is that it's an interesting question and I'm curious if there is a reason, but it's totally off-topic for Stack Overflow.
FWIW I suspect it was picked because "CRUD" is catchier than "CURD" would be. But I have no evidence of that.
@RyanM If you're asking about CRUD, then I'm not sure we have a relevant site. But maybe if it was something like "what terms were used before CRUD was invented" then it might be on-topic somewhere.
@VLAZ yeah, focusing more on the history and its origin would make it a better question
Actually it's also sort of logical. Obviously CREATE needs to be first and DELETE needs to be last. And you have to READ before you can UPDATE (so that you can find the thing to update). So thus: Create Read Update Delete.
@RyanM I don't want to delve too deeply, so this is going to be my last comment about this. CRUD makes a bit of sense logically - you have to Create before you Retrieve. And you have to Retrieve before you Update or Delete. But you cannot Delete then Update. So, perhaps it's that. It might have also just sounded funny "CRUD" the word means useless whereas the abbreviation is everything you do with records. So in some way, it's the opposite. So, might be similar to "less is more".
@KevinM.Mansour That's the very definition of link-only and the question isn't even asking for links but some may be impressed by its relatively high score.
I guess they are just a bit confused about the terminology. It's from FP review and also counts as review action. Would be interesting to know if they actually flagged.
@KevinM.Mansour Yes. I think they might even be immediately removed. There is a regex that checks if it's a "thanks" comment and if so deletes it after one vote.
I will be the first to admit that i am not the best at JavaScript but how do they expect any one to ever debug that mess stackoverflow.com/q/68584766/1841839
@DaImTo I usually vote "Needs debugging details". Yes, we could but it's huge pain. The question asker should supply a MCVE. That includes readable code.
Yes. But we're not a code writing service. Occasionally we get some poor developer that only has minified code and asks a very straight forward question about how to change it to do X. And they've shortened the code to only the relevant part as well as shown an attempt and why it failed. That's perfectly on topic. Just happens that a couple of variables are single letter ones.
@AdrianMole IMO no, OP could've typed their question title into google and not only had the linked dupe appear as the first result, but have google's preview part highlight the answer
@Scratte I hope whatever you're lying about was worth my time :p had to trawl through the suggested edit queue to find a new contributor with approved edits
@Nick I hope so too :) I'm having an existential crises that with the new Stacks Design, they are orange on posts that are not highlighted and black on posts that are highlighted.
I'm not even sure how to reflect that in my GUI :(
I figured I could have new users be both the editor and the poster.. and when show the differences.
But that was ruined by the fact that this isn't shown for the editor :(
I, personally, couldn't find a good dupe. I found bits and pieces, but not a good complete dupe candidate. @trip Maybe I was being too picky about my dupe target.
@E_net4thecommentaryremover Yikes, seems like the comment was rightfully deleted, no controversy there. Regarding the edit, it is a good improvement but I need to see if it invalidates any existing answers.
Even if not, personally I'm a bit jaded now by the OP calling me a Nazi so might be inclined to leave it closed and let others act on it.
@E_net4thecommentaryremover aaand OP has reverted the edit...