rindolf |
Regarding perlipc.pod : in the beginning of the sentence should I write "N.B. If the signal is fired, something bad happens." or "N.B.: if the signal is fired, something bad happens." ? |
talexb |
With the colon, plz. :) |
rindolf |
talexb: I see. |
rindolf |
talexb: and a lowercase "if"? |
talexb |
No, I think that could be upper case .. |
rindolf |
talexb: I thought so too, but the original was the other way. |
talexb |
it's a sentence unto itself. |
rindolf |
talexb: but it's after a colon. |
rindolf |
talexb: a colon does not start a new sentence. |
talexb |
I dunno. My degree's in Engineering, not English. :( |
talexb |
For me, the colon says, "Thing to the left is the title, thing to the right is the content. |
rindolf |
talexb: OK, thanks anyway. |
PerlJam |
rindolf: I'd capitalize "If" |
sdgvf |
rindolf: how about just 'Note:' |
* talexb |
\o/ |
PerlJam |
sdgvf: because he wants to "Note Well:" not just "Note:" :) |
Zaba |
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colon_(punctuation), 'Use of capitals' |
anno |
Note well: ... |
sdgvf |
most people, even if they know what N.B. stands for, aren't going to note it a whole lot harder than if it just says Note: |
rindolf |
Bikeshedding. |
rindolf |
PerlJam: according to Zaba's wikipedia link, it should not be capitalised. |
Su-Shee |
what it's for nota bene? |
PerlJam |
rindolf: My reading of the article is inconclusive as to what it "should" be. It seems to all depend on who's manual of style you subscribe to. |
^Mike\b |
Su-Shee: yes |
Su-Shee |
if a real sentence which could stand for its own follows, I start with a capital letter. if not, I don't. |
talexb |
By the way: Don't forget what colour you'd like the bike shed painted. |
PerlJam |
talexb: "color" ;-> |
talexb |
Pffffffft. ;) |
LeoNerd |
Wait.. we're -painting- the bikeshed now? Nobody ever mentioned paint before... |
talexb |
LeoNerd And you're head of the committee to choose the new COLOUR. |
Su-Shee |
"first we choose the color, then we choose the paint." (from my english teacher at school.. :) |
LeoNerd |
$ perl -MConvert::Color -E'say Convert::Color->new("bikeshed")->as_rgb->rgb' => Unable to parse color name bikeshed at -e line 1 |
kent\n |
doesn't the paint type preclude the colour choice? and paint manufacturer? |
LeoNerd |
Hehe.. Now we're arguing about the process of bikeshedding.. Go meta :) |
kent\n |
LeoNerd: you read my mind |
kent\n |
and now I mention that, were' metameta something |
talexb |
Taking things a *little* too literally. |
Su-Shee |
kent\n: it's a lesson to illustrate that color and paint are two different things... |
LeoNerd |
Colour is very complex problem... |
LeoNerd |
A lot of computer-type techies think it's just an RGB triplet, or maybe a triplet in some other space... |
talexb |
And anyway, Google's just patented the primary colours in their logo. But mauve is still available. For good reason. |
Su-Shee |
LeoNerd: luckily, I've learned "color" by actual "paint". ;) |
kent\n |
Yeah, it matters about whats in the proximity of the bikeshed, perceptual colour :( |
anno |
German uses the same word for color and paint, so we need to be taught the difference |
anno |
same with shadow and shade |
* LeoNerd |
takes anno out back to "teach him a lesson" |
Su-Shee |
anno: excellent example. same with freedom and liberty. |
* kent\n |
wonders if the bikeshed has to be colourblind safe |
* talexb |
wonders what colour a duck blind is. Oh. Camoflage. Never mind. |
Su-Shee |
camouflage. you've just introduced french into the discussion ;) |
kent\n |
talexb: what colours are blind ducks painted though? |
kent\n |
wait till we start painting our words, bikeshed synaesthesia sounds like a win. |