And is still they way I type. A single space looks unnatural to me.Obviously they were all too young to have ever taken a typing course. 2 spaces were the standard.
And is still they way I type. A single space looks unnatural to me.Obviously they were all too young to have ever taken a typing course. 2 spaces were the standard.
For office paper typing maybe but we never used 2 spaces on teletype (The day I passed Navy teletype typing school was a great day) machines as it wasted valuable and at the time slow transmission speeds sending unnecessary characters in formatted messages.Obviously they were all too young to have ever taken a typing course. 2 spaces were the standard.
No STOP key on our machines but we did have a BELL to wake people up on the other side.Didn't the early TT machines have a STOP key that did it for you?
Never heard of sanitizing links. Someone care to inform me on how to achieve this so I don't connect links with tracking?Look at the links you are supplying, guys. They contain tracking information.
I try to sanitize my links before posting here. You should consider doing the same -- for privacy reasons.
If you see lots of random-looking characters in an URL field, after the "?" and of the form: xyz=jsdlf9u43qd09yg035jpoq3jg0yuhgoiqeg (or whatever), that is usually tracking code.Never heard of sanitizing links. Someone care to inform me on how to achieve this so I don't connect links with tracking?
We must stop the Space Invaders.Took typing back in 1970. Learned two spaces after every period.
I've noticed. That when. I put. Two spaces. After periods. This website. Removes one.
Here's FIVE spaces. OK, that was five spaces.
Yup. And on this site, I can't tell where one sentence ends, and another begins.Took typing back in 1970. Learned two spaces after every period.
I've noticed. That when. I put. Two spaces. After periods. This website. Removes one.
Here's FIVE spaces. OK, that was five spaces.
No two spaces for us either, but we were typing taking it down via headsets & Morse code.For office paper typing maybe but we never used 2 spaces on teletype (The day I passed Navy teletype typing school was a great day) machines as it wasted valuable and at the time slow transmission speeds sending unnecessary characters in formatted messages.
I skipped Morse class but my roommate would send Morse in his sleep while at school. They decided to send me to the new fangled FLTSATCOM class instead.No two spaces for us either, but we were typing taking it down via headsets & Morse code.
Max.
https://www.wired.com/2009/04/fleetcom/
I had a hard enough time typing or copying code without trying to do both at the same time...No two spaces for us either, but we were typing taking it down via headsets & Morse code.
I could have a headphone in one ear typing while talking to another person with the other ear.I had a hard enough time typing or copying code without trying to do both at the same time...
That's all the proof anyone needs that a single space is WRONG. I will continue to use two spaces even though this site and probably many others delete one. I like to hope that English teachers will still flunk students that fail to properly use two.
I remember seeing our instructor taking down Morse at 30wpm and see him get up from his seat to close a window, come back to the desk and catch up!I could have a headphone in one ear typing while talking to another person with the other ear.
It's a skill that's learned over the years until it becomes like muscle memory.
That works in theory, I used to dread when a visiting war ship would dock (port of Tripoli) and we had to open a security link every A.M.What you send is what speed will be replied at so going fast on send, you had better be able to copy at that speed.