Guest guest Posted July 20, 2005 Report Share Posted July 20, 2005 > On Wed, Jul 20, 2005 at 03:19:01PM -0400, Masterjohn wrote: > For what it's worth, it is incredibly annoying to read posts where the > backquoted text isn't distinguished from the new text with arrows I like ONE arrow per line, or at least *something* that distinguishes one from the other. However.......case in point: > > > > Both humans and animals eat food, so eating cooked food : eating > > > food > > > > :: drinking milk after infancy : drinking milk. While email and This just hurts my head when I have to scroll through a long email containing this mess and then to find the response all the way down at the very bottom! Yes, I'm picky or as friend describs me, " persnickety " . Everyone has their preferences. There's no way to please everyone and their particular styles of reading, I don't expect anyone to change to please me, as there are many who find my preferences unbearable or silly. But I do believe that it's the little things that count, such as neatness and trimming of posts. :-)) -- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 20, 2005 Report Share Posted July 20, 2005 On 7/20/05, RVT <minatoneshoba@...> wrote: > > On Wed, Jul 20, 2005 at 03:19:01PM -0400, Masterjohn wrote: > > For what it's worth, it is incredibly annoying to read posts where the > > backquoted text isn't distinguished from the new text with arrows > I like ONE arrow per line, or at least *something* that distinguishes > one from the other. It's silly to restrict the number of arrows. They should just follow the universal convention: one arrow per number of replies since the text was written. In most cases there isn't much reason to backquote beyond the last email, but sometimes there is. I normally would have deleted my backquoted text above, but I saved it to make a point: Were there only one arrow per line in both backquotes, your text would be indistinguishable from mine. I went through the 2 seconds to delete the arrows at the blank spaces, which I think makes it more readable. > However.......case in point: > > > > > > Both humans and animals eat food, so eating cooked food : > eating > > > > food > > > > > :: drinking milk after infancy : drinking milk. While email > and Well this is very poorly backquoted. I don't think this is a problem with backquoting; it's a problem with text wrapping. I don't know why this happens, but if it happens to me I fix it manually. > Everyone has their preferences. There's no way to please everyone and > their particular styles of reading, I don't expect anyone to change to > please me, as there are many who find my preferences unbearable or > silly. But I do believe that it's the little things that count, such as > neatness and trimming of posts. :-)) I think there are pretty objective ways to look at which practices enhance readability the most. There might be some little details that can vary, of course, but, for example, it is unambiguously clear that having different numbers of arrows preceding the text that is quoted from *different* posts enhances readability much more than having only one arrow before all backquoted text. The poor backquoted text you included as an example is certainly poor, but the problem is not the number of arrows. It's the sloppiness and deranged format of the post, which is a glitch in the text wrapping system that the person was using. Unfortunately that person didn't take the care to fix it. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.