Comment by kazinator
8 years ago
The D in CDR already corresponds to "dexter-" (right); we just need "L" for "levo-":
CLR: cell levo/left reference.
CDR: cell dexter reference.
Organic chemistry uses these letters and prefixes. E.g. "L-glutamine", "D-glucose" (a.k.a "dextrose").
The H and S (hand side) don't really contribute anything. (Yes, left is side and a hand).
The whole point of this exercise (if it has a point at all) is not to come up with acronyms with justifiable expansions, but to come up with something that is less newbie-bostile. I'm not sure CLR/CDR fits the bill any better than CAR/CDR. Part of the problem with CAR/CDR is that CAR is an English word that means automobile, and people get a little hung up on that when they first see it. Likewise, CLR is usually a shortened form of the word "clear". So I'm not sure that CLR/CDR is any better than CAR/CDR. One of the advantages of LHS/RHS and FST/RST is that none of those trigrams have any semantic baggage associated with them other than their intended meaning.
Why trigrams: (cl x) (cr x). cell left, cell right.
I don't think car and cdr are newbie hostile; they are rather troll-fertile.