NEED HELP-process words in a text file
Ethan Furman
ethan at stoneleaf.us
Fri Jun 24 22:50:05 EDT 2011
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Fri, 24 Jun 2011 19:17:29 +0000, Cousin Stanley wrote:
>
>> Chris Rebert wrote:
>>
>>> Netiquette comment: Please avoid SHOUTING ....
>> The brilliant beam of light that first thought capitilized words
>> amounted to shouting never programmed cobol, fortran, or pl/1 in the
>> 1960s or 1970s .... :-)
>
> That's probably because the use of capitalisation for emphasis pre-dates
> the invention of computers by centuries. It is hardly an accident that
> the technical term for uppercase is derived from the same root as
> "majestic" and "major".
>
> The history of so-called "minuscule" and "majuscule" letters is complex,
> and it hasn't been a universal rule that Capital Letters have ALWAYS been
> read as emphatic, but it has been true for hundreds of years (at least
> for languages that have capital letters).
>
> Not the ONLY form of emphasis, of course (underlining, bold face, italics
> and l e t t e r - s p a c i n g are only a few of the other
> alternatives available), but in a plain-text medium with little control
> over the display of font, the use of lower and UPPER case letters is one
> of the few alternatives available. (The use of *markup* seems to have
> been a late invention in English, although in other languages it has been
> used much longer.)
>
> If ONE word in uppercase is read in a SLIGHTLY louder voice, then
> naturally it doesn't take much imagination TO READ EVEN QUITE SHORT
> PASSAGES OF UNINTERRUPTED UPPERCASE WORDS AS SHOUTING LOUDLY --
> regardless of the poor design of programming languages in the 60s and 70s.
Well said. :)
~Ethan~
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