> The long sentences are popular in some northern European countries so if
> the chip was designed there it can happen. Cut them some slack there,
> think about the comma as a soldering joint :-)
not only in norhtern European countries. In Italian (and all Latin based
languages) it's horrible to see something like "I speak Italian. I speak
English. I speak Spanish". Talking or writing like that would make you look
like a retarded. "I speak Italian, English and Spanish" is the only right
form to express that concept.
Anyway...right use of commas is one of the most difficult concepts in Latin
based languages.* They are not meant to build long sentences but to give
pauses, correlate sentences or list ideas <-- oh yes, like this :)
* I could have used a comma there.
--
"Non � mai troppo tardi per imparare a suonare..."
"S� bh�, magari alle 3 di notte evita."
Agreed. However, if you were to "grade" the reading level of this
set of statements, you would find it targets the "correct" complexity
level intended for most writing (e.g., "6th grade" -- about 11 years
old).
One could assume that technical documents are most often read by
a "more educated" audience. Yet, you still have to consider how
easy it is for *any* reader -- even one technically inclined -- to
tackle complex grammar while simultaneously trying to deal with a
new technical concept, etc.
E.g., it's akin to balancing parens in LISP. More punctuation and
sentence structure requires more effort for the reader to keep
track of what belongs with what.
I try to write like I would *speak* to a person when describing
a concept, implementation, etc. -- except to avoid colloquialisms.
The punctuation should impart a good "rhythm" to the reading
that corresponds to the same type of rhythm you would encounter in
the spoken word.
> like a retarded. "I speak Italian, English and Spanish" is the only right
> form to express that concept.
> Anyway...right use of commas is one of the most difficult concepts in Latin
> based languages.* They are not meant to build long sentences but to give
> pauses, correlate sentences or list ideas<-- oh yes, like this :)
Actually, I find use of semicolon and dash to be more problematic.
All punctuation affects the pauses -- or inflection -- in our speech.
Technical people also tend to break rules, subtly. E.g., your:
'In Italian (and all Latin based languages) it's horrible to see
something like "I speak Italian. I speak English. I speak Spanish".'
should actually be:
'In Italian (and all Latin based languages) it's horrible to see
something like "I speak Italian. I speak English. I speak Spanish."'
I think this a consequence of our thinking of quotes in the same
"matched sense" as parens (this was a poor example to cite).
On 9/19/2011 2:20 AM, Oliver Betz wrote:
> Real errors will break your application, and I found many of those in
> data sheets from different manufacturers.
>
> But the more annyoing problem is that many companies don't even
> correct errors when you report them.
>
> I would like to know whether first level support doesn't forward
> corrections or other parties are ignoring them.
You know, I wonder if a wiki wouldn't make sense in a
"commercial" environment? I.e., have the vendor create
Rev. 0 of the document. Then, let *users* tweek it to
reflect REALITY!
Or, would there be legal/liability ramifications that
would scare vendors away from this approach?
Shark: Isn't it true that documentation posted on your
corporate web site contained this misinformation which
led my client to design a faulty product which eventually
resulted in the deaths of four people?
Vendor: Yes, but that document is "user maintained" and
has a clear disclaimer to that effect present on ALL
pages. Furthermore, to gain entry to the site, users
(including your client) are required to sign a release
acknowledging this.
Shark: But do you have staff that routinely monitor the
web site in question? For example, to remove any disparaging
comments about your company, the quality of its products,
etc.?
Vendor: Well, yes, but...
Shark: So, someone at your company was undoubtedly aware of
the presence of this incorrect information on that site
yet chose to do nothing about it?