Hi Peter! At 2022-07-17T11:47:59-0400, Peter Schaffter wrote: > > Note the omission of the ineffable \& escape sequence after one of > > the initials. > > Appreciation for the exquisite choice of adjective. :)
I've adopted it in emails since I started to get yelled at every time I used my own nomenclature for it. Also, this is shorter than all proposed alternatives. :D > O.T., I know, but have we reached a consensus on how to make > that effing \& effable? I'm still for "non-printing, zero-width > character." Modulo a hyphen, that's what Ossanna had in CSTR #54 (1976), and it's damn good. It says nothing misleading. The main thing giving me pause is that, in groff, it also perfectly describes `\)`. They're both dummy characters, but \) is transparent to sentence endings (all of a sudden we're back on topic) and \& is not. As an amateur documentarian and lexicographer, I have a powerful hankering for definitions I can capture as noun phrases without having to resort to relative clauses. But these escape sequences have so far defied my efforts to characterize them tersely. The docs in Git HEAD still call \& a "non-printing input break" but I'm not wedded to "input break", or even to "non-printing" for that matter, despite its Ossanna stamp of approval. I'm strongly opposed to calling either of them a "space". In my random walk along the mountainside of definitional perfection, I hit one waypoint I liked. \& zero-width sentential dummy character \) zero-width non-sentential dummy character But I still have two reservations about it. 1. The distinction isn't really whether the character is constitutive of a sentence, but as noted above, whether it will maintain a state of sentence cessation. 2. I am dubious that I can sell the word "sentential" to most readers, even if it were perfectly accurate in this case. I once had a rather chagrining experience at a former employer, casually dropping this term into a defect report and finding that I had startled the entire internal application support team with the fact that this word even existed. While I'm in confessional mode, I'll admit that I provoked a similar response when filing a ticket pointing out that some operation in the system didn't conform to Peano arithmetic. One can seize the nerd crown only to find that it doesn't wear comfortably... The qualifier "non-printing" might still prove valuable for cluing in the reader that an escape sequence is effectively eliminated early in processing; in other words that it doesn't "become" a "zero-width space", which many readers seem to experience a strong temptation to believe. So, yeah, still stuck on this issue, and that's why. Regards, Branden
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