I liked using em dashes, but now I’ve stopped. I’m ecen less likely to fix minor spelling and grammatical errors that I otherwise would’ve, because at least it will be easier to recognize a human behind the comment or post.
Also, signing my name like this helps too:
,.),.)==============D~~~~~~~
I refuse to stop using en dashes. I’ve been using them because they are good typography, and the fact that clankers got clued in to that doesn’t make it wrong.
If you don’t have a compose key, well, you should have one. You can define it easily in the Kde control center. I suppose there’s the equivalent in Gnome.
I liked using em dashes, but now I’ve stopped. I’m ecen less likely to fix minor spelling and grammatical errors that I otherwise would’ve, because at least it will be easier to recognize a human behind the comment or post.
Also, signing my name like this helps too: ,.),.)==============D~~~~~~~
I refuse to stop using en dashes. I’ve been using them because they are good typography, and the fact that clankers got clued in to that doesn’t make it wrong.
You can still have the same function using a hyphen. How do you even tan em dash on a standard keyboard?
Compose - -
I assume compose is meant to be a key? What key is compose?
The Compose key.
If you don’t have a compose key, well, you should have one. You can define it easily in the Kde control center. I suppose there’s the equivalent in Gnome.
It was introduced by Sun. It’s very convenient.
Classy