As a programmer, I often have to use this expression:
Set the application up.
or something like that. But I'm not sure what the correct grammar is, and what this grammatical area is called in English.
expressions
As a programmer, I often have to use this expression:
Set the application up.
or something like that. But I'm not sure what the correct grammar is, and what this grammatical area is called in English.
Best Answer
Both "set up something" and "set something up" are perfectly correct English, as "set up" is a phrasal verb. As kajaco mentions, "setup something" is just a spelling error (although it is fairly common).
Of the two correct phrases, I don't think one is inherently more clear than the other, if the
something
part is short enough. But, it is important not to let the two words separate too far. That is, when thesomething
part gets longer, it becomes increasingly worse to separate "set" and "up".For example, these sound good, because "all of your accounts" is short enough:
But the following only really works if you don't separate the phrasal verb components:
If you are a non-native speaker, you might ask, "what is the line between too long and not too long?" Well, there is no clear line that can be given as a rule. But I would say that if the
something
part is more than 5 words, you might want to play it safe and keep "set" and "up" together.