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This page (revision-17) was last changed on 19-Oct-2007 00:50 by 207.171.180.101  

This page was created on 06-Mar-2007 12:23 by ChuckSmith

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At line 1 changed one line
In many languages, a hyphen (-) is a single symbol, while a dash (--) is a double symbol. Dashes are primarily used by publishing experts, such as newspaper and book editors, as a substitute for a semi-colon (;) to get a more fluid feel of a text. To make matters more confusing, people typically call a hyphen (-) within a URL as "dash" when saying a URL out loud. Thus, www.hs-heilbronn.de would be pronounced "www DOT hs **DASH** heilbronn DOT de" because it is faster to say than "hyphen".
Dashes are primarily used in informal writing, like letters or notes; they can substitute almost any punctuation, including commas, semicolons, colons, quotes, parenthesis, or stops. They usually designate a pause a little longer than a full stop: that's what the em-dash is often called //pause// and en-dash //half-a-pause//. Most style guides advice to avoid dashes in formal text, as it makes it look immature and not thought-through.
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An example:
They can also be used around parenthetical statements–-such as this one-–in place of the em dashes preferred by some publishers, particularly where short columns are used, since em dashes can look awkward at the end of a line.
More detailed information: [[Wikipedia:Dash|Dash in Wikipedia]]
[[Wikipedia:Hyphen|Hyphen in Wikipedia]] [[Wikipedia:Minus_sign|Minus in Wikipedia]]
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When the typewriters were intorduced, the technical limitations made every character on their keyboard scarce: thus the minus sign was butchered: made a little longer and lowered, to serve as a replacement for all the "horizontal line" characters. The new character was named "dash" or "minus/dash". Its exact meaning can be usually guessed from the context, but in cases where it mattered, various tricks were used to distinguish its various uses. When computers were created, they commonly uses teletype terminals -- and later more advanced teletype terminal emulators -- that all inherited the butchered typewriter character. With appearance of the desktop computers (Apple) and come back of proptional-width fonts, also the various "horizontal line" characters returned. Ubfortunately, there is no standard easy way of typing them on the used-to-be-teletype keyboard, and most users are not even aware of them. See [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyphen-minus|Hyphen-minus on Wikipedia]].
When the typewriters were introduced, the technical limitations made every character on their keyboard scarce: thus the minus sign was butchered: made a little longer and lowered, to serve as a replacement for all the "horizontal line" characters. The new character was named "dash" or "minus/dash". Its exact meaning can be usually guessed from the context, but in cases where it mattered, various tricks were used to distinguish its various uses. When computers were created, they commonly uses teletype terminals -- and later more advanced teletype terminal emulators -- that all inherited the butchered typewriter character. With appearance of the desktop computers (Apple) and come back of proportional-width fonts, also the various "horizontal line" characters returned. Unfortunately, there is no standard easy way of typing them on the used-to-be-teletype keyboard, and most users are not even aware of them. See [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyphen-minus|Hyphen-minus on Wikipedia]].
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More detailed information: [[Wikipedia:Dash|Dash in Wikipedia]]
[[Wikipedia:Hyphen|Hyphen in Wikipedia]] [[Wikipedia:Minus_sign|Minus in Wikipedia]]
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Linking to a wikipedia article under some text that contradicts what is written there is pretty strange.
Version Date Modified Size Author Changes ... Change note
17 19-Oct-2007 00:50 3.605 kB 207.171.180.101 to previous Fixed grammar
16 19-Oct-2007 00:49 3.604 kB 207.171.180.101 to previous | to last Fixed grammar
15 19-Oct-2007 00:47 3.604 kB 207.171.180.101 to previous | to last Fixed spelling and grammar
14 26-Sep-2007 09:47 3.603 kB ChuckSmith to previous | to last restore
13 26-Sep-2007 02:04 3.625 kB 216.23.162.164 to previous | to last
12 07-Mar-2007 16:09 3.603 kB ChuckSmith to previous | to last more detailed info into bullet list
11 07-Mar-2007 15:54 3.586 kB ChuckSmith to previous | to last bullet list of external links
10 07-Mar-2007 15:48 3.571 kB RadomirDopieralski to previous | to last removed puses, added continuations
9 07-Mar-2007 15:39 3.521 kB RadomirDopieralski to previous | to last reworked the leading paragraph, added paragraph about hyphens
8 07-Mar-2007 15:37 3.201 kB RadomirDopieralski to previous | to last reworked the leading paragraph
7 06-Mar-2007 17:10 3.62 kB RadomirDopieralski to previous | to last dash in Lynch's Guide to Grammar and Style
6 06-Mar-2007 16:40 3.517 kB RadomirDopieralski to previous | to last added hyphen-minus link to wikipedia
5 06-Mar-2007 16:07 3.44 kB RadomirDopieralski to previous | to last double hyphen
4 06-Mar-2007 16:06 3.413 kB RadomirDopieralski to previous | to last added double hyphen
3 06-Mar-2007 15:48 3.325 kB RadomirDopieralski to previous | to last removed a link that requires logging in
2 06-Mar-2007 15:43 3.445 kB RadomirDopieralski to previous | to last more on the subject
1 06-Mar-2007 12:23 0.812 kB ChuckSmith to last confusion of hyphens and dashes
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