• pelya
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    21519 days ago

    Just look at those nested parentheses. A true sign of (pedantic) greatness, when a person needs to clarify something in their earlier clarification.

    • Lucy :3
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      9919 days ago

      I love it™ (The nested parentheses are one of the greatest tools known to mankind (And to all other creatures))

      • @Quetzalcutlass
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        9019 days ago

        To paraphrase an old tweet: “parentheses - for when every thought comes with bonus sub-thoughts”.

        • @Homescool
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          3919 days ago

          I always tell myself I am reading minds when I read inside parentheses

      • @[email protected]
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        1919 days ago

        I have been stopping myself from using those and instead restructure my sentence. But if people like it, guess I can start keeping it.

        I do find it more useful, however, to have a kind of a reference to the thing written at the end instead [1], but markdown doesn’t seem to have anything for that, and using the syntax for Markdown references, is only useful for hyperlinks, or if the reader is willing to read the hover text 2.

        [1]: Like This. I would love it if the markdown viewer would link the above [1] to this line. Maybe with a scrolldown effect.

          • pelya
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            1019 days ago

            Eh, Lemmy Connect does not format it properly.

          • @[email protected]
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            419 days ago

            And automatically numbered too! Nice.

            Though for me, instead of a scrolldown effect, it reloads the page on clicking the link. Trying a second time, it does the scrolldown properly. Weird
            But that’s just an implementation detail and as long as this is standard, I’ll just start using it.

            Thanks

          • ✺roguetrick✺
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            419 days ago

            Well ain’t that some shit. It would make my comments more readable to a degree[1]. I also like how they have return links for when you have some monster text wall that nobody would ever read in the first place on this platform.


            1. not that I’d ever use it ↩︎

    • u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)
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      2119 days ago

      I’ve had a teacher in elementary school scream at me for doing so. (Nesting parentheses is forbidden. [You are supposed to use brackets.])

      • pelya
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        2419 days ago

        It’s wild seeing square brackets for something other than array indexing.

      • @sramder
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        1619 days ago

        I had a teacher that screamed at me for “taking the lords name in vain…” They’re definitely wrong from time-to-time ;-)

        • @[email protected]
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          1319 days ago

          I had a science teacher that told us, “If you sneeze three times and nobody blesses you, the devil takes your soul!”

          It’s science.

          • @sramder
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            218 days ago

            Pretty sure I read that paper a few years back ;-)

        • @Kethal
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          18 days ago

          What did the teacher say about apostrophes to indicate possession?

          • @sramder
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            118 days ago

            No idea… stopped listening after I was adminished for my “god damnit…” ;-)

    • Farid
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      1519 days ago

      Some of those parens could’ve been replaced with commas and retain their meaning (that’s what I do to avoid nesting, so that it doesn’t get confusing).

        • Farid
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          18 days ago

          Not as good as my other primary languages, I have to admit. Finnish has too many consonants for my taste.

        • Farid
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          418 days ago

          I’ve never seen that being used, but it seems it’s a thing in English. What if you wanna best deeper? Do you go {}? Then <>? «»?

          • VindictiveJudge
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            218 days ago

            Not really an English thing so much as a math thing that makes too much sense to not use elsewhere. For instance, in math you might have x[3 - 7{3y + (a * b)}]. I haven’t actually seen them go deeper than three sets, though, so I’m not sure what would be next.

            • ElTacoEsMiPastor
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              18 days ago

              at that point I start recycling them, and go back to parenthesis.

              so when bp = 300x - 3, this:

              4( 4[ 4{ 15bp + 10 } - 375 ] - 2250 ) - 15000

              would turn to

              4( 4[ 4{ 15( 300x - 3) + 10 } - 375 ] - 2250 ) - 15000

              perhaps not the best, but I rather stick to conventional symbols rather than using… idk, question marks? that’d be funny as hell, though

              just picture it:

              4© 4« 4¿ 15bp + 10 ? - 375 » - 2250 🄯 - 15000

    • @Aceticon
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      18 days ago

      The amount of effort I do to try and avoid using double parentesis is trully herculean.

      I think that stuff is the product of a completionist/perfectionist mindset - as one is writting, important details/context related to the main train of thought pop-up in one’s mind and as one is writting those, important details/context related to the other details/context pop-up in one’s mind (and the tendency is to keep going down the rabbit hole of details/context on details/context).

      You get this very noticeably with people who during a conversation go out on a tangent and often even end up losing the train of thought of the main conversation (a tendecy I definitelly have) since one doesn’t get a chance to go back and re-read, reorganise and correct during a spoken conversation.

      Personally I don’t think it’s an actual quality (sorry to all upvoters) as it indicates a disorganised mind. It is however the kind of thing one overcomes with experience and I bet Mr Torvalds himself is mostly beyond it by now.

      • @[email protected]
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        17 days ago

        perfectionist mindset - as one is writing,

        I think an “M-Dash (perfectionist mindest— as one is writing,)” would be more appropriate than an “N-Dash” in your statement. No ‘nested’ parentheses needed (unless you’re looking to add non-essential (though insightful) info to your sentence); but the type of… “PAUSE” makes all the difference

    • @Matriks404
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      419 days ago

      I once did double “parentheses” in speech when started doing streaming year ago, lol.

    • @someacnt_
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      118 days ago

      Thought I was the only one noticed abundance of the parenthesis