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Subject:RE : RE: Your thoughts on punctuation? From:Yves JEAUROND <jingting -at- rogers -dot- com> To:techwr-l -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com Date:Tue, 17 Apr 2007 14:24:08 -0400 (EDT)
Typographical wisdom dictates that using ALL CAPS
does mislead users on messages of the same length,
especially short ones.
There are exceptions: the display may be too small or badly designed
for CAPS/no caps to make a difference. You'll have to judge the usability.
So...
If the machine is making the user guess as to what
happens next, dots can punctuate the intent. "Calling server..."
For politeness, a period is cool.
"Please wait."
Tell your engineers gently about customer etiquette, manners, protocol,
grammar and syntax. :-) And how rude customers find it when these
are ignored.
Yves Jeaurond
-- Reading David Allen's _Getting Things Done_ (2001)--
Warren <awarren -at- synaptics -dot- com> a écrit :
Ladonna Weeks wrote:
> Our product has a keypad used for installation and diagnostics. It can
> display up to four lines of 20 characters each. What is correct
> punctuation for brief, informative statements, such as the following:
>
> (line 1) Calling server
> (line 4) Please wait
>
> Should there be a period after each statement? I'm having trouble
> getting the programmers to add periods and I wonder if the convention
> for such displays is to leave them off. What is your experience?
Ladonna:
I don't use periods for that sort of thing; I punctuate and capitalize
as I would on a sign:
NO PARKING
Monday-Friday
9 am - 6 pm
-----------------------
WELCOME!
Please come in
-----------------------
CALLING SERVER
Please Wait
-----------------------
-Andrew
=== Andrew Warren - awarren -at- synaptics -dot- com
=== Synaptics, Inc - Santa Clara, CA
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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