Numeronyms are fun, but they have one major problem: namespace collision.

What is a11y? Is it accessibility? Associatively? Axiomatically? Autobiography?

This is obviously a problem that needs solving.

My solution? SHAsum hashing.

We can avoid the ambiguity of "a11y" with this unique, cryptographically sound alternative:

Accessibility? a884a5f3609f2cca635fed56d4ec5795da56fb970y

Axiomatically? a20c4bcee8f977a3f5a3b6b499d52d7dd32584771y

Simple, easy to visually distinguish, everyone wins.

I was actually racking my brain for 'starts with a, ends in y, same length' words to make this dumb joke but then I remembered that /usr/share/dict has _huge_ flat-file lists of words of many languages in it, so I could just get them from that?

Ninety seconds of grep, awk and sort later, there it is. For future reference there's 223 of them, alphabetically going from abdominoscopy to axiomatically.

Y'all these computers have so much in them already. _So much_. But nobody knows.

You know what an accessibility problem really looks like? It looks like thousands of people standing up web services and slapping ads on them that do exactly nothing that you couldn't do 1000x faster without ever leaving your machine, because nobody knows how to make their machines do those things.

I joke but a note about language usage and open source _cultural_ accessibility: Numeronyms are bad.

There's no meaningful distinction between "a884a5f3609f2cca635fed56d4ec5795da56fb970y" and "a11y".

Neither is recognizable as "accessibility" to anyone new to the field - great work nerds, we've managed to give the word "accessibility" its very own accessibility problem - and I gotta tell you, "not typing out long words because they're long words" seems childish as hell to most people.

@mhoye this feels like the same thing that results in 3 letter variable names as though we are working on punchcards still
@petrillic It's not from as far back as punch cards, but it does date to Bell Labs. Kernighan wrote about how the Unix tradition of shortened names comes from the keyboards of the terminals at Bell Labs being so terrible that they'd start hurting to type on very quickly.
@petrillic null terminated strings, though, those date all the way to punchcards.
@mhoye I remember how unpleasant the model 33 were to type on. Whew.