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Aesthetics



Speaking completely irresponsibly for a change:

And's argument that not conforming to Latin alphabet conventions when writing in the latin alphabet is not utterly bogus.

But reading Lojban is hard enough work already without introducing *some* signposts. .imU'ileda'inunago'ikeinodafAntelenurojbOprecucIskataitu'adei

I have favoured using braces to help out in complex structures. Yes, we already have phonetic punctuation. But like I say, it's hard enough already. This got vetoed when I did it in the introductory prose to the two books, though. Which I accept, since they are exemplars of Standard Lojban, and the optional punctuations have never been considered Standard.

(Dunno if I liked the = marker for sentence beginnings either. We have more choices now, with Unicode...)

When I write lojban, I use lots of linebreaks and lots of indentation. For the same reason.

And I regard the refusal to include graphic representations of punctuation (the dotless style) as callousness to me the reader. Yes, I can work out Lojban written without dots. But why is your lojban so cool as to merit the extra headache?

The real solution is a web engine converting between styles, of course.

--
Dr Nick Nicholas           [Stephen] King published _The Green Mile_ as
Research Assistant         the first serialized novel since the 1920s,
French & Italian           in a gesture that was meant to recall the
University of Melbourne    serial work of Dickens. No doubt, King is the
Australia                  Dickens this century deserves.
nickn@unimelb.edu.au          -- Richard von Busack, _Metro Santa Cruz_,
http://www.opoudjis.net     Dec. 8-15 1999, p. 29.