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[lojban] Re: Register Login Logout revisited
Well, since you mention it, {klama} doesn't specify whether a person's
coming or going. So I suppose {klavei} could refer to the arrival or
the departure or perhaps even both--maybe the database has a column
for sign-in time and for sign-out time and they're both parts of the
same record, and {klavei} refers to that record.
So perhaps instead of simply logging in, you "start a login session"
or something to that effect.
{cfaklavei} = the part of the record that records when you logged in
{fa'oklavei} = the part of the record that records when you logged out
{klavei} = the whole record of the session
{zbaklavei} = to make a new record of session; i.e. to log in
{mulgauklavei} = to complete the record of the session; i.e. to log
out
On Mar 7, 6:23 pm, Pierre Abbat <p...@phma.optus.nu> wrote:
> On Monday 07 March 2011 13:18:37 lojbaj wrote:
>
> > It's called "logging in" because there's a log of visitors, right, and
> > you need to log yourself in it. Shouldn't the word reflect that? It
> > should include {vreji} somehow.
>
> > I think {klavei} and {li'avei} work fine for the records themselves,
> > so take those and add something like {ciska} or {benji} to indicate
> > that you are sending a notice of your arrival/departure.
>
> {klama} isn't the opposite of {cliva}; that's {tolcliva}. So the opposite of
> {li'avei} is {tolclivyvei}.
>
> Pierre
> --
> When a barnacle settles down, its brain disintegrates.
> Já não percebe nada, já não percebe nada.
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