[Home]History of Foobar

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Revision 7 . . December 11, 2001 2:28 pm by (logged).132.75.xxx [reverting to earlier version - I made a mistake]
Revision 6 . . December 11, 2001 2:26 pm by (logged).132.75.xxx [There's already a FUBAR article, restricting this to discussion of foobar]
Revision 5 . . December 11, 2001 2:03 pm by Greg Lindahl [Where does the author get the authority for this claim? Geesh.]
Revision 4 . . (edit) November 26, 2001 11:26 pm by (logged).185.249.xxx [link to fugazi]
Revision 3 . . (edit) November 6, 2001 6:53 pm by (logged).4.254.xxx
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (author diff)

Changed: 1c1
The word foobar might originate in the World War II American Army slang word FUBAR. Later, fubar might have changed to foobar, perhaps by merging it with the word foo, which is a general term of disgust and might originate in the chinese word "fu" (or "foo" 福), meaning happiness. (This is all folk etymology, nobody knows if fubar and foobar are actually related. The Jargon File, for example, gives no origina for foobar.)
The word foobar might originate in the World War II American Army slang word fubar, which is an abbreviation of "Fucked up beyond all recognition" (describing a very bad situation, e.g., a plan that went wrong) or "... beyond all repair" (for machinery that was destroyed). Fubar was most probably influenced by the German word furchtbar which means terrible or awful.

Changed: 3c3
Today, foobar is also used as a dummy test word in many descriptions and tutorials of programming languages, where it serves as an example text, e.g., for the division of a string into foo and bar (see metasyntactic variable). Foobar is also used in another form, fugazi, which supposedly resembles a Vietnamese word. Except from the military and computer sciences, the word fubar was never very common until used in the movie Saving Private Ryan (1998).
Later, fubar might have changed to foobar, perhaps by merging it with the word foo, which is a general term of disgust and might originate in the chinese word "fu" (or "foo" 福), meaning happiness. (This is all folk etymology, nobody knows if fubar and foobar are actually related. The Jargon File, for example, gives no origina for foobar.)

Added: 4a5
Today, foobar is also used as a dummy test word in many descriptions and tutorials of programming languages, where it serves as an example text, e.g., for the division of a string into foo and bar (see metasyntactic variable). Foobar is also used in another form, fugazi, which supposedly resembles a Vietnamese word. Except from the military and computer sciences, the word fubar was never very common until used in the movie Saving Private Ryan (1998).

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