• #.,9

    From Ardith Hinton@1:153/716 to Bob Roberts on Mon Dec 21 23:40:14 2020
    Hi, Bob! Recently you wrote in a message to Ardith Hinton:

    Although I realize you are practising English by rewording
    stuff you have read elsewhere, I had to write down your
    subject heading before I was able to quote it back to you
    because "#.,9" doesn't makes sense to me...

    Excellent! You cracked the code. Now I understand what
    Denis is up to.


    Glad to be of help... and I appreciate your input too. I very much enjoyed your comparison with training an AI robot. Perhaps the two of us can get some ideas across in situations where neither of us can do it alone. :-)




    --- timEd/386 1.10.y2k+
    * Origin: Wits' End, Vancouver CANADA (1:153/716)
  • From Bob Roberts@1:218/840 to Ardith Hinton on Tue Dec 22 12:09:14 2020
    Excellent! You cracked the code. Now I understand what
    Denis is up to.

    Glad to be of help... and I appreciate your input too. I very much enjoyed your comparison with training an AI robot. Perhaps the two of us can get some ideas across in situations where neither of us can do it alone. :-)

    Maybe Denis needs to practice his introductory statements. :-)

    Speaking of that, I noticed you always indent the first line of your paragraphs... something I haven't done since I handwrote my school assignments on lined paper. Very unusual in the digital age. An old habit? I still use two spaces after my punctuation, which is apparently not appropriate anymore.

    Bob Roberts
    --- SBBSecho 3.11-Linux
    * Origin: Halls of Valhalla =-= Happy Holidays (1:218/840)
  • From Ardith Hinton@1:153/716 to Bob Roberts on Fri Jan 22 00:03:50 2021
    Hi, Bob! Recently you wrote in a message to Ardith Hinton:

    Maybe Denis needs to practice his introductory
    statements. :-)


    Yes, from my POV it would be helpful if he indicated the source of the material & whether or not he'd like other folks to add corrections.... :-)



    I noticed you always indent the first line of
    your paragraphs... something I haven't done
    since I handwrote my school assignments on lined
    paper. Very unusual in the digital age.


    That's how I was taught too. I gather it's considered "fussy & dated" in business nowadays, where a "sleek & modern" look is preferred (maybe because the employer can save a fraction of a cent each time the typist doesn't have to use the tab key). I hear it is generally not done in email either. However, I don't care what's fashionable & I'd much rather communicate in Fidonet.... :-)



    An old habit?


    Perhaps. But IMHO our ancestors knew things which we'd do well to pay attention to even if other folks think they know better.... :-)



    I still use two spaces after my punctuation,


    I still use two spaces at the end of a sentence because that's what my mother, i.e. the stenographer who was a stickler for detail, taught me to do... and because I realize as a teacher that if I don't distinguish between a period at the end of an abbreviation & a full stop at the end of a sentence some of my readers may find the interpretation more challenging than it needs to be.



    which is apparently not appropriate anymore.


    There's still a lot of controversy about that. If I use a text editor designed for programming I must find ways of persuading it to do what I want... to make my intentions clear to readers who aren't native speakers of English or are emotionally upset. To this end I often use "white space" in ways which are
    ... as Dallas just informed me... unacceptable in computer language. I find it annoying when programmers insist on "correcting" my spacing, but I see now that their priorities are very different from mine.

    When I find myself at the mercy of programmers who don't understand my needs I do my best to tune into the computer's learning style... as I did years ago with a friend who seemed to like telling people he thought like a computer. With him I learned to put various complex ideas in point form & avoid metaphors he couldn't easily find in the dictionary. With his wife I also learned not to speculate as to whether (e.g.) Mrs. XXX might be having an affair with the milk man because she'd announce it to everyone else she knew as an established fact.

    One of the difficulties I see re Fidonet is that although we're at the mercy of programmers they don't necessarily agree with one another. I know how to fill a line in such a way as to reassure QEdit I can be trusted not to leave an orphan character on the next... but other folks use different software. :-Q




    --- timEd/386 1.10.y2k+
    * Origin: Wits' End, Vancouver CANADA (1:153/716)