Which brings the use of the ellipsis into my head. The conventions on that seem to have changed in the 40+ years since I left school, but maybe I mis-remember. I use the things too often (and probably incorrectly), but as Diz says, it becomes a habit. Summon a grammar/linguistics wizard!Diziet Sma wrote:I think it's a kind of 'conversational pause' kind of thing
Best way to find stations ?
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Re: Best way to find stations ?
I would advise stilts for the quagmires, and camels for the snowy hills
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
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Re: Best way to find stations ?
Done.. also fixed the link for the Pylon Based Equipment Remover, which was suffering from the same problem.Okti wrote:Actually the link on the wiki page for LRS does not point to the latest version of LongRangeScanner, the link on my sig is correct. Can a wiki wizard can correct it?
Most games have some sort of paddling-pool-and-water-wings beginning to ease you in: Oolite takes the rather more Darwinian approach of heaving you straight into the ocean, often with a brick or two in your pockets for luck. ~ Disembodied
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Re: Best way to find stations ?
I don't know if I qualify as a wizard, but I have to proofread the damn things ... (argh! There's one now!)El Viejo wrote:Summon a grammar/linguistics wizard!
Basically it's three dots. But there's a special typographical character for them, Unicode U+2026, thus … (as opposed to ... : I trust we can all see the difference? ). The typographical character is preferred, because it won't accidentally split across lines. When it comes to typesetting, if the font you're using has an ugly ellipsis (oh how I hate a font with an ugly ellipsis), you can find-and-replace it with a hand-crafted version that's more pleasantly spaced, but you've got to use non-breaking, fixed-width spaces.
Ellipses are used to indicate several different things. In academia, principally, they're used to mark where a bit of a quote has been omitted. There are differences of opinion about the proper use of this but personally I think that when these are used they should have square brackets around them, to differentiate them from ellipses that the original quoted author might have used.
Then there's using them to indicate a pause … like that one. Or an unfinished sentence, that just trails away …
Spacing is also an issue, as is combining it with other punctuation (are you sorry you asked yet?). To space, or not to space? The main thing here is consistency. Personally, I prefer to space out my ellipses like this … as opposed to this…which I think looks ugly. But I don't add a second space when combining them with other punctuation marks, like this …! And I don't add a second space when they appear at the end of a sentence ‘inside quotation marks …’.
We can go on to discuss the bitter controversies regarding the use of four-dot ellipses to indicate elided paragraphs, if you like …
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Re: Best way to find stations ?
And that's why I use two dots.. three just looks bad... and until such time as they see fit to map that typographical character to a single key, I'll stick to my two dots.. entering unicode characters whilst typing is a PITA..Disembodied wrote:Basically it's three dots. But there's a special typographical character for them, Unicode U+2026, thus … (as opposed to ... : I trust we can all see the difference? ). The typographical character is preferred, because it won't accidentally split across lines.
Most games have some sort of paddling-pool-and-water-wings beginning to ease you in: Oolite takes the rather more Darwinian approach of heaving you straight into the ocean, often with a brick or two in your pockets for luck. ~ Disembodied
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Re: Best way to find stations ?
(See what I did there? ) The special ellipsis character is ALT-; on a Mac …Diziet Sma wrote:[…] until such time as they see fit to map that typographical character to a single key, I'll stick to my two dots.. entering unicode characters whilst typing is a PITA..
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Re: Best way to find stations ?
Thanks D... as you say, consistency is the key, I think. MS Word automatically makes them for you (and does them as I use them, strangely), which is very occasionly annoying, but more often handy.
I would advise stilts for the quagmires, and camels for the snowy hills
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
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Re: Best way to find stations ?
Oh, look...another thread derailment
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Re: Best way to find stations ?
It's all SandJ's fault!Smivs wrote:Oh, look...another thread derailment
Most games have some sort of paddling-pool-and-water-wings beginning to ease you in: Oolite takes the rather more Darwinian approach of heaving you straight into the ocean, often with a brick or two in your pockets for luck. ~ Disembodied
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Re: Best way to find stations ?
Yep! It'll get back on topic, in an elliptical sort of way.Diziet Sma wrote:It's all SandJ's fault!
I would advise stilts for the quagmires, and camels for the snowy hills
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
Re: Best way to find stations ?
Test, test ...
… … … - no luck.
Oh, wait, …
OK (Alt+0133 it is.)
öadevhbaerbrveaävbäaewvbnrvaäiaewvbaeevbnaäevvbnääeritbgqäebrnvqäp qeinbnqäpinbwrjgpowbvnnverig
Damn, both Alt+0160 and Alt+255 for non-breaking-space seem to work in the preview of the post, but once submitted, it breaks exactly at the non-breaking space.
Bah! whatever …
… … … - no luck.
Oh, wait, …
OK (Alt+0133 it is.)
öadevhbaerbrveaävbäaewvbnrvaäiaewvbaeevbnaäevvbnääeritbgqäebrnvqäp qeinbnqäpinbwrjgpowbvnnverig
Damn, both Alt+0160 and Alt+255 for non-breaking-space seem to work in the preview of the post, but once submitted, it breaks exactly at the non-breaking space.
Bah! whatever …
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Re: Best way to find stations ?
That seems to be a non-breaking space you've got in there … when I resize the window your post remains at a fixed length!snork wrote:öadevhbaerbrveaävbäaewvbnrvaäiaewvbaeevbnaäevvbnääeritbgqäebrnvqäp qeinbnqäpinbwrjgpowbvnnverig
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Re: Best way to find stations ?
FTFY. I see no need for it.Diziet Sma wrote:I think it's a kind of 'conversational pause' kind of thing, like just now, I didn't really start a new sentence, I just inserted a brief pause, and continued. Two full stops at the end of the post is probably roughly analogous to trailing off - waiting for an expected response from whoever I'm talking with.SandJ wrote:Off-topic, but, may I ask - why do you use two full stops? (I have seen others do that online too.)
And my wife, an indexer, gets very grumpy with these as it indicates a very lazy academic. They should never appear in that role in a finalised text.Disembodied wrote:Ellipses are used to indicate several different things. In academia, principally, they're used to mark where a bit of a quote has been omitted.
I would disagree: they do not indicate a pause; that is the role of the semi-colon or the full-stop. Certainly, ellipses can end unfinished sentences where the author has, you know...Disembodied wrote:Then there's using them to indicate a pause … like that one. Or an unfinished sentence, that just trails away …
I was under the impression that in English, the correct form is no space before or after the ellipsis.Disembodied wrote:Spacing is also an issue, as is combining it with other punctuation (are you sorry you asked yet?). To space, or not to space? The main thing here is consistency. Personally, I prefer to space out my ellipses like this … as opposed to this…which I think looks ugly.
You have omitted another standard publishing symbol—the em dash—which is typically represented using hyphens on computers. Thus:
You have omitted another standard publishing symbol - the em dash - which is typically represented using hyphens on computers.
In any case - so it it's not me - there is no recognised use for a double full-stop; full-stops, commas, semi-colons, hyphens and dashes can fulfil all the required roles for a break.
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Re: Best way to find stations ?
As an employee of an academic publisher, I'd disagree: sometimes the full quote is too long and full of digressions. No sense in covering three pages with some dead author's letter to her sister-in-law, burbling about the shrubbery, when the only bit that's relevant is the part at the beginning where she mentions her husband's death, and at the end when she invites the sister-in-law to the funeral. As long as the quoter isn't changing the meaning of the original text, it's fine. I'd only expect an indexer to index material presented in the final text, and I wouldn't give an indexer non-final text!SandJ wrote:And my wife, an indexer, gets very grumpy with these as it indicates a very lazy academic. They should never appear in that role in a finalised text.
They can be used to indicate a pause, or more correctly a hesitation, in reported speech. In a straightforward sentence, you're right; a semi-colon or colon is appropriate (like that one). But in reported speech, or in a chatty form of text … I'd say it's OK to use an ellipsis!SandJ wrote:I would disagree: they do not indicate a pause; that is the role of the semi-colon or the full-stop. Certainly, ellipses can end unfinished sentences where the author has, you know...Disembodied wrote:Then there's using them to indicate a pause … like that one. Or an unfinished sentence, that just trails away …
There is no correct form, because there's no universal authority. It's personal preference/house style only: just keep it consistent.SandJ wrote:I was under the impression that in English, the correct form is no space before or after the ellipsis.
The first ones there are ems; the second ones look like en-dashes but could be hyphens. This font seems to make hyphens - longer than en-dashes – which gets confusing: an en-dash should be longer. Em-dashes should be unspaced, en-dashes should be spaced; hyphens shouldn't be used as dashes at all. Em-dashes are, for my taste anyway, a little bit old-fashioned now (although perhaps that's because I typeset quite a few old texts, and they are often em-dash crazy—an em-dash here—an em-dash there—gracious, Mr Bozziwig, I didn't know where a body should look!). I'd only use an em-dash myself to represent a sudden interrup—SandJ wrote:You have omitted another standard publishing symbol—the em dash—which is typically represented using hyphens on computers. Thus:
You have omitted another standard publishing symbol - the em dash - which is typically represented using hyphens on computers.
Hyphens and en-dashes are the bane of my bloody life. Numbers, for example, should be separated by en-dashes, e.g. pp. 45–57. You can use wildcard searches on Word to find numerals with adjacent hyphens and automatically change them to en-dashes, but they're not the only things to watch for. Something like "Sections A–E" should use an en-dash; something like "the Franco-Prussian War" uses a hyphen but "a French–German trade agreement" uses an en-dash (because "Franco-" is a prefix and "French" is not). And most authors wouldn't know an en-dash from a hole in the ground.
Mind you, it's not as bad as authors who do their own formatting. <shudders> "I want this in two columns, so to help you,* I've typed the first line of the first column, followed by a string of spaces, followed by the first line of the second column, followed by a return; then we have the second line of the first column, followed by another string of spaces, followed by the second line of the second column, followed by a line break this time, just to spice things up …". And so on.
* a phrase guaranteed to bring on fits of panic belching in a typesetter.
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Re: Best way to find stations ?
You just gotta love this forum, man!
I would advise stilts for the quagmires, and camels for the snowy hills
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
Re: Best way to find stations ?
I'm learning and improving my English writing skills on an Internet forum about a space trading game. Don't think that one would fly with the wife though, even though it's true.
"A brilliant game of blasting and trading... Truly a mega-game... The game of a lifetime."
(Gold Medal Award, Zzap!64 May 1985).
(Gold Medal Award, Zzap!64 May 1985).