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Newbie working with plain text: best practices for formatting etc?
Matthew Chagnon | Jan 22 2008
Hey all, I've searched far and wide online and am really surprised not to find very much info on this (perhaps I'm using the wrong search terms!). After reading Bit Literacy, I decided that I wanted to starting using plain text files more at work, especially for notes. Unfortunately, years of reading 43F has enhanced my fiddly nature, and I'm more focused on trying to format my notes "correctly," or at least to have some sort of standard to stick to. Does anyone have any best practices (or web resources) for working with text on a page? Currently, I find text files difficult to read (and line breaks confusing). Any thoughts? 26 Comments
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Who's the audience?Submitted by technocrat on January 23, 2008 - 1:14am.
If you are writing for your own use, keep the text as plain as possible. If you then have to re-use the words in something that needs polish for others to look at, you will have less to undo. Your problem with line breaks has a couple of potential fixes, depending on what you use for a text editor the details will be different. First, you can show "invisible" characters like tabs and linebreaks. Second, you set your default preferences to soft wrap text. If you have seen really old movies with manual typewriters, what you see for word processing is pretty simple. 1. Insert paper Now, a thought experiment. What if the paper were arbitrarily wide and the carriage part of the typewriter arbitrarily wide so that you could go on typing indefinitely? At some point, your first words would be out of sight to your left like cell A1 when you're over in cell AH1 in a spreadsheet. Well, that's the analog to having soft wrap off. With soft wrap on, you have something that is not available in a typewriter without magic, which is that when you run out of room on the right side of the screen (paper), the text just carries over to the left on the next "line." So what looks like a paragraph on the screen is logically just one line, because you haven't pressed return to produce the equivalent of a line feed. When you do, you start typing on the next logical line, but unless you press return twice, there is no white space between the beginnings of the lines to show the paragraph break. Since it's useful to know where paragraphs start, either use a double return or indent the first line with a tab. If you have a short hand, use an abbreviation expander. Short hand is much easier to write than to read, so let the machine do that work as you type. » POSTED IN:
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