Z Dash Cam App

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Imelda Matchett

unread,
Aug 4, 2024, 3:22:56 PM8/4/24
to tuchicraphe
Sevensocial sins: politics without principles, wealth without work, pleasure without conscience, knowledge without character, commerce without morality, science without humanity, and worship without sacrifice.

In TeX, the standard fonts have no figure dash; however, the digits normally all have the same width as the en dash, so an en dash can be a substitution for the figure dash. In XeLaTeX, one can use \char"2012.[11] The Linux Libertine font also has the figure dash glyph.


Preference for an en dash instead of a hyphen in these coordinate/relationship/connection types of terms is a matter of style, not inherent orthographic "correctness"; both are equally "correct", and each is the preferred style in some style guides. For example, the American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, the AMA Manual of Style, and Dorland's medical reference works use hyphens, not en dashes, in coordinate terms (such as "blood-brain barrier"), in eponyms (such as "Cheyne-Stokes respiration", "Kaplan-Meier method"), and so on.


In English, the en dash is usually used instead of a hyphen in compound (phrasal) attributives in which one or both elements is itself a compound, especially when the compound element is an open compound, meaning it is not itself hyphenated. This manner of usage may include such examples as:[21][22][28][29]


The disambiguating value of the en dash in these patterns was illustrated by Strunk and White in The Elements of Style with the following example: When Chattanooga News and Chattanooga Free Press merged, the joint company was inaptly named Chattanooga News-Free Press (using a hyphen), which could be interpreted as meaning that their newspapers were news-free.[30]


The en dash is sometimes used as a substitute for the minus sign, when the minus sign character is not available since the en dash is usually the same width as a plus sign and is often available when the minus sign is not; see below. For example, the original 8-bit Macintosh Character Set had an en dash, useful for the minus sign, years before Unicode with a dedicated minus sign was available. The hyphen-minus is usually too narrow to make a typographically acceptable minus sign. However, the en dash cannot be used for a minus sign in programming languages because the syntax usually requires a hyphen-minus.


The em dash is used in several ways. It is primarily used in places where a set of parentheses or a colon might otherwise be used,[43][full citation needed] and it can also show an abrupt change in thought (or an interruption in speech) or be used where a full stop (period) is too strong and a comma is too weak (similar to that of a semicolon). Em dashes are also used to set off summaries or definitions.[44] Common uses and definitions are cited below with examples.


This is a quotation dash. It may be distinct from an em dash in its coding (see horizontal bar). It may be used to indicate turns in a dialogue, in which case each dash starts a paragraph.[46] It replaces other quotation marks and was preferred by authors such as James Joyce:[47]


An em dash may be used to indicate omitted letters in a word redacted to an initial or single letter or to fillet a word, by leaving the start and end letters whilst replacing the middle letters with a dash or dashes (for censorship or simply data anonymization). It may also censor the end letter. In this use, it is sometimes doubled.


Three em dashes one after another can be used in a footnote, endnote, or another form of bibliographic entry to indicate repetition of the same author's name as that of the previous work,[48] which is similar to the use of id.


According to most American sources (such as The Chicago Manual of Style) and some British sources (such as The Oxford Guide to Style), an em dash should always be set closed, meaning it should not be surrounded by spaces. But the practice in some parts of the English-speaking world, including the style recommended by The New York Times Manual of Style and Usage for printed newspapers and the AP Stylebook, sets it open, separating it from its surrounding words by using spaces or hair spaces (U+200A) when it is being used parenthetically.[49][50] The AP Stylebook rejects the use of the open em dash to set off introductory items in lists. However, the "space, en dash, space" sequence is the predominant style in German and French typography. (See En dash versus em dash below.)


Because early comic book letterers were not aware of the typographic convention of replacing a typewritten double hyphen with an em dash, the double hyphen became traditional in American comics. This practice has continued despite the development of computer lettering.[51][52]


In many languages, such as Polish, the em dash is used as an opening quotation mark. There is no matching closing quotation mark; typically a new paragraph will be started, introduced by a dash, for each turn in the dialogue.[citation needed]


Corpus studies indicate that em dashes are more commonly used in Russian than in English.[57] In Russian, the em dash is used for the present copula (meaning 'am/is/are'), which is unpronounced in spoken Russian.


In French, em or en dashes can be used as parentheses (brackets), but the use of a second dash as a closing parenthesis is optional. When a closing dash is not used, the sentence is ended with a period (full-stop) as usual. Dashes are, however, much less common than parentheses.[citation needed]


Dash apps give a point-&-click interface to models written in Python, vastly expanding the notion of what's possible in a traditional "dashboard." With Dash apps, data scientists and engineers put complex Python analytics in the hands of business decision-makers and operators.


When building Dash apps in a business setting, you'll need Dash Enterprise to deploy and scale them, plus integrate them with IT infrastructure such as authentication and VPC services. Watch this short video to see how Dash Enterprise delivers faster and more impactful business outcomes on AI and data science initiatives.


The latest version of Dash Enterprise offers new Plotly App Studio header controls and customization, as well as Global Environment Variables for secure and streamlined data management. Learn more at the upcoming launch event!


Get familiar with Dash by building a sample app with open source. Scale up with Dash Enterprise when your Dash app is ready for department or company-wide consumption. Or, launch your initiative with Dash Enterprise from the start to unlock developer productivity gains and hands-on acceleration from Plotly's team.


Dash Enterprise is the trusted, purpose-built platform for using Dash within a business. The platform provides deployment, rapid development environments, and authentication out of the box. On the development side, a set of low-code libraries vastly extend the capabilities and simplify the development of creating Dash apps.


Access comprehensive support, guided installation, enablement sessions, and more with Dash Enterprise. Learn how Plotly's Customer Success team enables faster decision-making with expert assistance, from development to deployment.


I am trying to do a text to columns for the below data with "space" as my delimiter. However, some of the data has a dash (-) in between and that is also getting separated out when i run my text to column. I don't want these values to be separated out. See below for the text to column i ran:


If all scenarios should be separated into two pieces (first name and last name), you can use 2 as the number of columns in the text to columns tool. You can use the same delimiter that you had previously (-\s) if you want the column to be split by EITHER the first instance of a space or dash. The default settings will leave all additional instances as is.


Hi @mustufa2019 , if you're wanting to split the columns only when there is both a dash AND a space following, then you can use the RegEx tool. A rough example of how to do this is provided below. Disclaimer: I'm still getting the hang of RegEx!


Here, Antrim actually violates, as he sometimes does, a basic rule of parenthetical em dash usage, that you can only use one set per sentence. The violation of this stricture is unsettling and makes it difficult to keep up with meaning. Which, in a sentence and story about artistic chaos and loss of control, is, of course, the point.


This is true. But is efficiency the point or purpose of writing? It seems to me that novels, especially, are almost anti-efficiency devices. Yes, we want to communicate clearly, but sometimes, just as crucially, we also want to clearly communicate the difficulty of communicating clearly.

3a8082e126
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages