(Note from the people who are responsible for this Web site: The following paragraphs were written by someone who insisted we provide this space, but we do not in any way endorse any of it, nor have we even read more than the first couple sentences. Furthermore, we do not recommend that you read it either. You should probably return to the main parts of the #FRiendliest Web site right now.)

How To Type Good

In this diatribe I, an irregular regular on #FRiendliest, propose to tell you how to type in an IRC channel. It seems to me that because IRC--this marvelous medium of real-time communication--is so different from talking face-to-face or even on the phone, users should pay special attention to how their lines of text appear on others' screens.

I am not referring to the content per se of what is typed but rather to how that content is communicated in black squiggles on a white screen. However, the point is that the content you intend to communicate is affected by exactly how you type.

Before I begin my full-steam rant and rave, let me admit that I'm probably the slowest and least accurate typist in all of IRC. You wouldn't think a typist who is slow would also be sloppy, but--believe you me--that's how I type. I type using literally about three of my many fingers, and even then, despite all the practice those three have gotten, they are all the time hitting the wrong keys. Because I refuse to take typing lessons again, and because I always have so many extremely incisive comments to make in the channel, I'm all the time sending virtually unintelligible garbage out for everyone to see and ponder over.

"Gotta ya. Whap fro manker do. I;m fnin, and yopu>"      <--- That's how I type pretty much all the time, but if I tried to slow down to be more accurate, then I would never get anything typed at all, because the conversation would have passed me by by a couple minutes. And if you're thinking, "And is that such a bad thing?" then here is another opportunity to return to the regular non-ranting, non-raving parts of the #FRiendliest Web site.

Anyway, that's my excuse. It's not that I don't know better, it's that I can't do better.

So, on to the main rant and rave.

I'd like to rant about five specific topics. My rantings are just my own opinions, and you should certainly feel free to disagree, as long as you don't mind being wrong. Although I address only five topics, no doubt others could be added. Perhaps you have a sixth pet peeve, or perhaps you are guilty of several not listed here. If you've read this far, probably not.


Ellipses
At the moment my pettest peeve has to do with the pointless and confusing use of ellipses, which are those little dots . . . like this . . . that are so popular. In normal written works such as books and magazines, an ellipsis is used to denote that a thought or statement is unfinished, like this:

"From across the hall he heard her say, 'Please don't drop that pig on my . . . ' and then he heard a loud thunk and a squeal."

But in so many conversations on IRC, people use an ellipsis at the end of a line just out of habit, maybe because they've learned that if you hold down the period key, it will repeat. As I see it, to use ellipses so indiscriminately is to render their occasional appropriate use meaningless. What I mean is, if you use an ellipsis at the end of every line, then how are the others in the channel to know when you really mean it? They can't, which means you have voluntarily robbed yourself of a valuable means of communicating an idea, which in this case is that your thought or statement truly is unfinished.

Another use for the ellipsis, a use that is special to IRC channels, is to signal that your thought or statement is temporarily unfinished and that you want the others in the channel to wait till you type another line. Using an ellipsis this way, at the end of each of several lines, is a good way to tell a story or joke without being interrupted.

"If a man speaks in the woods and no woman is there to hear him . . .
. . . is he still wrong?"

But, of course, if you're all the time using ellipses at the end of a line you type when you do not really mean "Wait," then after a while you end up training people to ignore your ellipses altogether.

There are three reasons people use an ellipsis. One, as I say, is out of habit, which means it's almost always used incorrectly. In addition to the drawbacks already mentioned, there's yet another drawback, which is that the people in the channel who respect the ellipsis as a signal to not interrupt will sit there like fools for way too long, waiting for the offender to finish the thought that never gets finished.

"I know that . . ."
wait wait wait
"You . . ."
wait wait wait
"Hello . . ."
wait wait wait
/p

Another reason is that the offender secretly or perhaps unconsciously hopes the others in the room will somehow fill in the unfinished thought in some brilliant way and give the offender credit for that brilliance. What I say is, if you don't have the guts to finish your thought, don't expect others to do it for you. Either finish your thought the best you can or don't use the ellipsis to begin, er, end with.

A third reason for using the ellipsis is that it truly is appropriate, and I encourage such use every time.

If you do want to use an ellipsis, I suggest that you render it correctly, which means using exactly three dots, not two or four or twelve, and I further suggest that you surround each dot with a tap of the space bar, just as I have done in these paragraphs, so that the ellipsis is more easily recognized as such.

Furthermore, if you do force yourself to space the dots properly every time, which takes way longer than just leaning on the period key, you might begin to realize how often you use an ellipsis when you needn't.


Personal pronouns and verbs
Ladies and gentlemen of IRC-land, I have an announcement: Personal pronouns and verbs are free. Some of you know that, some of you don't.

The main point of all these rantings and ravings is that clear expression in an IRC channel (or anywhere else, for that matter) is always desirable, and you cannot express yourself clearly for very long without the need for a personal pronoun or two, or a verb or two. Yet one might think, from observing what sometimes passes for communication in so many IRC channels, that typing personal pronouns and verbs somehow costs extra. It doesn't.

Now, it's true that back in the days when people sent telegrams, which was also back in the days when people rode horses to work, each word cost extra, which is why you'd see, "Home Sunday. Bagged six elk. Need more ice," instead of, "I'll be home on Sunday. I bagged six elk, and they're really beginning to stink, so I need to get more ice on the way." The telegram version used eight words, whereas the normal, normal, normal version used 26. At a dime a word, the telegram saved the sender $1.80, which in those days would buy as many as nine beer.

But communicating in IRC is not the same as sending a bunch of telegrams. (Incidentally, all of this applies to e-mail as well as IRC, but that's another diatribe.) In IRC you can send a complete sentence, with all those useful words in place, just as cheaply as you can send confusing, inscrutable telegramese-style messages.

So, I ask you, why in the world would you type "Appreciate it," when you could type "I appreciate it"? In the telegramese-style message, it's unclear whether the sender means, "I appreciate it" or "You appreciate it," which is what it literally means. The extra cost in terms of the time necessary to say what you mean is well worth it if the benefit is additional clarity. Unless you really want your reader to wonder what the heck you mean, there's never an excuse good enough to justify leaving out useful personal pronouns and verbs and other simple words. Communicating clearly in IRC is tough enough without the gratuitous deletions of so many simple yet important (and entirely free) words.

I suspect one reason so many people in IRC omit the crucial personal pronoun "I" is that they were ill-taught as children. I've heard several people of various ages and various educational backgrounds express the idea that if you type "I" all the time, you're somehow self-centered, that you're somehow interested only in yourself. What I say is--and I don't say this often enough--balderdash, tommyrot and bullocks.

If you somehow got it into your head that you should avoid typing "I" and "me" and "my" in order to seem less egotistical, less needful of attention, then you've got to take that bull by the horns and rip it right back out of your head. If those words are necessary, or even slightly useful, to clearer communication, then by gosh golly you should use them. (I apologize for all the swearing, but that's what sometimes happens when you rant and rave.)

Furthermore, by omitting the "I" you're not really accomplishing your goal of seeming to be less self-centered. When you type, "Appreciate it," the "I," if it is understood by your reader at all, is implied anyway. By merely not typing the word, you have not succeeded in directing attention away from yourself, you've merely made yourself more difficult to understand.

If you remember correctly, your teachers who taught you to avoid the use of "I" were really saying, "Don't talk about yourself so much." Counting up how many times you use the word "I" is a good indicator of how much you talk about yourself, but merely deleting the word from a sentence in which you are already talking about yourself doesn't make that sentence any less about you, it just makes it less scrutable.


This has been a big waste of my time.
Take me back
to the normal, pleasant parts
of the #FRiendliest Web site.
I am a masochist, and I want to
read the second half
of "How To Type Good."