How was this handled in the age of typewriters?
How was this handled in the age of typewriters?
How on earth did English typography get so weird with mdash, ndash, dash, hyphen, etcetera while most of the readers have no clue about the the differences. IMHO, just use dash.
Can you explain me how the different lengths of dash add to the understanding of the text, when I usually don’t even see the difference on my mobile phone screen?
There’s at least one Kidney Lake
Just updated apps on my phone. Appears to be doing three updates at once. Still, a huge improvement.
You are wrong, till is perfectly fine – and so is til. See Merriam-Websters article about this, at https://www.merriam-webster.com/grammar/should-you-use-until-or-till-or-til
cheese sandwich
There was no question in the post. I’m pretty sure that poster knows what “word size” is in this context.
No speed cap yet, but all new cars sold in the EU must have a signal that alerts the driver if they’re driving faster than the current speed limit.
https://www.autoweek.com/news/a61532276/mandatory-speed-limiters-europe-cars/
So thoughtful to put Spanish in spanish.
Oh wait
I find your boldening of phrases very annoying.
The speed that you get through your rj45’s depends on the quality of the cable used, both ‘in the wall’ and from the socket to your device. For 1Gb/sec they need to be cat 5e or better.
well, obviously, we all know that cats love some dairy products and sometimes these are hidden in the tree tops. Duh!
Nevada city, California. Population 3k+. Thanks to my wife’s addiction to christmas movies.
Can they?
The archive link that was supplied works for me?
This week I don’t. Next week you may be right.
yaml
same for html instead of htm.
7/16" - 10ct = 10mm
That is what ‘automation’ often is. You take a working process, then let machines do as many steps in that process as you can. Harvesting crops, sending memos, robots spraypainting car parts, self driving cars (We still have a lot to do there)
Building on that it gets even more interesting as we try to find better, or even completely new processes.