• Bob
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    fedilink
    321 day ago

    I don’t think Prem Thakker’s mastered semicolons quite yet.

    • @[email protected]
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      2
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      5 hours ago

      Semicolons can be used to list items that are more than just a word or two long, and may/may not contain commas. So if you’re listing phrases contain commas, putting a comma between list entries would be confusing as fuck.

      For example… I will list a few US capital cities, and their corresponding states: Albany, New York, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Sacramento, California, Houston, Texas…

      Compare that to: Albany, New York; Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; Sacramento, California; Houston, Texas.

      See? Much clearer.

      I don’t know if this person did it exactly correctly, and I’m not going to go back and read it again to check, but the idea itself is just fine.

      Unless a lot has changed about semi-colons in the past 20 years.

      Edit: I reluctantly went up to read it again, and it seems like the only thing missing would be a colon after “The combo of” and a comma before “really says it all”

    • @foggianism
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      89 hours ago

      That comes with Premium Thakker;

    • @affiliate
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      1021 hours ago

      sometimes in math textbooks they use semicolons when listing things. maybe prem thakker’s writing this post for the mathematicians

      • @[email protected]
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        2120 hours ago

        You can use semicolons when listing things instead of commas, but that’s usually only for clarity when listing things with commas in them (e.g. “Last summer I visited Las Vegas, Nevada; Tucson, Arizona; Seattle, Washington; and Sacramento, California.”)

        • @qarbone
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          English
          -27 hours ago

          I’m mean, you’re not wrong about the semicolon usage but your example is absolute dogwater. I may be sleep deprived but why in Poseidon’s briny deeps would you use a semicolon to separate sentence fragments into their own phrases?!

          e.g. “Last year, I went to Germany, Spain, Italy, and France; and ate schnitzel, ham, gelato, and olives.”