What is the origin (from what comes from) of NULL?

Disable the topic, but what is the beginning of NULL?

I sent an email to a French-speaking client containing "Thank you for bringing your NULL item."

Apparently, in French, NULL (NUL) translates into:

nul, nulle / nyl /

I am. adjective

(acquaintance) [person] hopeless, useless;

[torment, étude] are useless;

[Roman film] trashy (conversational);

Oh, I insulted them. Perhaps from French descent?

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4 answers

Morphological

From middle French zero, from Latin nullus.

Noun

null ( nulls)

  • .
  • ; .
  • () ASCII Unicode (␀), , .
  • () , .

, .

null ( null, )

  • , "null void"
  • ()
  • ()
  • (, ), , .

: Wiktionary.

-, ( ) . , " ", , , .

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Nullus == "Nothing"

Nul , , .

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"Null" - . , , . , (Oxford dictionary of Current English), , , .

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I'm French, “Zero” is widely used as useless or useless.

If your client is used to read your messages in English, he should be fine (especially if he works in an IT domain).

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Source: https://habr.com/ru/post/1781708/


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