Path: ...!newsreader4.netcologne.de!news.netcologne.de!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!not-for-mail From: ram@zedat.fu-berlin.de (Stefan Ram) Newsgroups: comp.lang.python Subject: Re: Context without manager Date: 26 Nov 2023 19:15:53 GMT Organization: Stefan Ram Lines: 47 Expires: 1 Dec 2024 11:59:58 GMT Message-ID: References: <25955.34158.142219.335334@ixdm.fritz.box> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit X-Trace: news.uni-berlin.de xcxV7/FhxzWirOpZfKd/ew5KfieSyIzQEzacQUXSMJ63c/ Cancel-Lock: sha1:efbZM+xYVRHUpcssWKHN7s4pr/E= sha256:g+YNoaRD1L5zKB6B16K29R9OWAuErINY7B4vFopMkHU= X-Copyright: (C) Copyright 2023 Stefan Ram. All rights reserved. Distribution through any means other than regular usenet channels is forbidden. It is forbidden to publish this article in the Web, to change URIs of this article into links, and to transfer the body without this notice, but quotations of parts in other Usenet posts are allowed. X-No-Archive: Yes Archive: no X-No-Archive-Readme: "X-No-Archive" is set, because this prevents some services to mirror the article in the web. But the article may be kept on a Usenet archive server with only NNTP access. X-No-Html: yes Content-Language: en-US Accept-Language: de-DE-1901, en-US, it, fr-FR Bytes: 2972 Piergiorgio Sartor writes: >The problem is I've some SDK of some device which >provides context manager *only* classes. Everybody please excuse my being off topic. But it really make is hard for me to read messages when contractions are used in a way that seems wrong to me. I noticed this now for the third time in a post by Piergiorgio. I (not being a native speaker myself) think, when "have" is the main verb, it is not contracted. It's contracted when it's an auxiliary verb. So: I've seen this before. I've got another an. , but (note that no other verb follows "have" directly): I have been there. I have all of them. I wrote all of the above just by my own judgement, but now let me try to find something in the Web so support this: Web: |As far as I'm aware, verbs are usually only contracted when they are: |auxiliary, e.g. 'are' in they're leaving, and |unstressed (they can be attached to a stressed word but remain | unstressed, themselves), and |informal/casual (or formal when quoted verbatim). .... |in en-US, where they favour using 'have' as a main verb, which |does not get contracted: |"I have money" .... quoted from the World-Wide Web. The other two cases were: >>>>I've myself unclear ideas and >>>>I'll not see any reply .