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http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1589553514.jpg I think Dallas is still pickled. Speaking of pickled, I'm out of herrings, and Opus is coming over this weekend. |
I thought this was another parking lot thread..
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I have never had, or put together a resume. I was offered a job while I sat in my desk in English class at school while a junior in high school. I worked for him for 6.5 years, moved to OKC, looked in the newspaper, the first place I went to hired me on the spot. I worked there for 26 years until digital photography took over the world and made us a buggy whip company. The remains of that company were bought by a rival and I worked there for three years until my former boss recommended me to a a man in the Aerial photo business. I worked there for 13 years until once again digital put that company out of business because they would not invest in digital. Now I work for myself and we have some pretty cool digital aerial platforms that would be science fiction just 10 years ago. |
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It is interesting that resume scanning software looks for 2 spaces. Quote:
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indent several lines by four spaces, it doesn't matter. The forum software fixes your silliness for you. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1589554108.jpg |
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A lot of what we do grammatically and in sentence structure was to overcome the limitations of the technology of the time. Even our keyboard layout was so that we couldn't type so fast as to jam the keys in our typewriters.
Now, a lot of the technically unnecessary rules have changed as new technology makes the old readability techniques obsolete. (Serif fonts vs san-serif, technical features and such.) Underling is a great example of something that is rarely used as often. It has been replaced with the new advanced bold feature in many style guides. There is no one hard and fast rule for everything. In fact there never was, but now there are even more options. The key is that for corporate documents etcetera, that each contributor agrees on the same style. A style guide is created and shared among the contributors for consistency. |
Always two.
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Hierarchy of ideas corresponds with hierarchy of spaces.
The biggest idea gets its own book or volume. [air gap] The next biggest gets its own chapter [page break] The next biggest gets it own paragraph. [line break] The next biggest gets its own sentence. [two spaces] The next biggest gets its own word. [one space] The smallest gets its own letter. [no space] |
Too bad JP Stein is not with us, he'd know the answer for sure. he taught me how to speel.
I miss that ole fart sometimes. |
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^^^^ LOL....and to quote Bernie T...
Oh but they're so spaced out :D |
I had to think about this and write something out to make sure. I have never, of never heard of, using two spaces after a period. And I am old!
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ie: "Let's eat, grandma!" or "Let's eat Grandma!" |
What does punctuation have to do with spaces!
That confuses me?..... |
Two. There should be no other option!;)
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I alway's misuse the quote when it "should" be an apostrophe....I know it's incorrect....but just don't care... Mebbe he just spaced out in typing class...it happens ;) |
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