• @[email protected]
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    3 days ago

    Put yourself in her shoes. If she derives joy from a colorful sorting of the books, it’s likely any other sorting would cause some annoyance/anguish (however minor). She would feel this way each time she laid eyes on the bookshelf.

    On the other hand, a colorful sorting would only negatively affect you when you are actively looking for a book. I’m guessing that’s far less often than she merely looks at the bookshelf.

    A compromise could be that she sorts the books by color and then by authors name. Not the most efficient sorting method for finding books, but would save a considerable amount of time compared to no author name sorting at all.

    Edit: alternatively, a quick Google image search of the book name would tell you all you need to know to quickly find it in a colorful sorting.

      • @GaMEChld
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        53 days ago

        This is the smartest solution. Order and aesthetics simultaneously!

      • @[email protected]
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        12 days ago

        I know, right. It’s crazy to me that people need to actually read the spine of a book they own in order to know what it is. Like, don’t you know exactly what it looks like? It’s your book. In a personal library, it makes sense to group books by how similar they look.

        • @mojofrododojo
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          12 days ago

          In a personal library, it makes sense to group books by how similar they look.

          you do you, crazy man. keep telling yourself this shit makes sense lol

    • @[email protected]
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      13 days ago

      On the other hand, a colorful sorting would only negatively affect you when you are actively looking for a book.

      No, unfortunately, it would remind me every time that I looked at it that I had somehow married someone who thought this was acceptable.