Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Is "a software" really never correct?










In France I have always been told that saying "a software" is not correct English (as a nominal compound), and that "a piece of software" or "a software program/package/product/system" must be used instead.



Recently I have doubts... is there any case where it is actually correct?




Examples found on the Internet:




  • SalsaJ, a software for data analysis at school

  • So if you sold a software which required your customer to pay a monthly fee, [...]


Answer



No, this is always wrong. Both examples you provide contain incorrect usage of the term "software." (A mistake is still a mistake even if many people make it.)




However, there might be special cases where you'd see the article preceding software.



For example:




A software solution would be better for the problem than a hardware one.




The indefinite article "a" modifies "solution", not "software", in this case in spite of preceding "software" in this case.


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