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DaddyP · 61-69, M
Maybe for the next lesson, you could explain why computer keyboards have a “return” key on it…
@DaddyP It is because computer keyboards are a logical evolution from the typewriter. On typewriter keyboards, there was a carriage return key so that one could continue typing on the next line. The reason it still exists when it has no reason to is that humans are illogical.
DaddyP · 61-69, M
@CorvusBlackthorne you’re on a roll, so I’ll cast another Q…

Why are the keys arranged QWERTY, ASDF, etc. instead of ABC…?
@DaddyP There is a fascinating answer behind that. In the early days of typewriters, the keys would become jammed frequently. This was compounded by the fact that secretaries and other persons who regularly used typewriters became so skilled at speed typing that the poor machines could not keep up. The solution created by the typewriter manufacturers was to rearrange the keys in an unfamiliar pattern.

Why they have not simply reverted to an alphabetical layout, I do not know.

dancingtongue · 80-89, M
Em and en dashes are a relic of printing days, originally when set my hand but the later linotype machines had the option. Em and en are width measurements in moveable type and so were important to know when writing headlines because some letters such as m and w are wider than your average letter like an n, but then there are those that narrower like i and j. And yes, I am old enough to have set type by hand.
ServantOfTheGoddess · 61-69, M
@dancingtongue What was the situation where you were setting type by hand? Did you work for a newspaper?
dancingtongue · 80-89, M
@ServantOfTheGoddess High school print shop. Yes, high schools still had vocational training and printing was one of the options at mine. I didn't take printing, but I did take journalism and was on the high school newspaper (as well as working part time for two local weeklies covering high school sports) and dabbled a bit in the print shop during lunch hours and after school. While none of my aunt's weekly newspapers -- she serially owned or ran them literally the length of California from Weed on the Oregon border to El Centro on the Mexican border -- were ever close enough for me to gain any experience, all of her sons became printers so I was exposed to their experiences as well. But I worked on the journalism side, writing and editing including page make-up and headline writing which requires a working understanding of such things as fonts, picas, ems and ens, because the computer was doing the sizing for you because the computer didn't exist yet.
ServantOfTheGoddess · 61-69, M
@dancingtongue that is so interesting. Thank you.
Poppies · 61-69, F
Never heard the term
Poppies · 61-69, F
@ServantOfTheGoddess I don't suppose it is something I could have accidentally done myself?
ServantOfTheGoddess · 61-69, M
@Poppies I don't know 🤔
Poppies · 61-69, F
@ServantOfTheGoddess I guess I did it myself. Just now selected "regular."
Yep, I have a few size of dash handy to paste in: — – - ·

The em-dash is my favorite, but I'll mix it up with an en-dash sometimes!!
I am not familiar with that term.
DDonde · 31-35, M
After looking it up, I do use them sometimes. But I've never heard of the term before until now.
ServantOfTheGoddess · 61-69, M
@DDonde I'm not sure why I even know the term ─ but I like it :)
I never knew that was what it was called.

 
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