Hey, that's actually really cool. I didn't realize you could do that with a numeric keyboard. Thanks for the not-so-direct tip!Technically, there is no hyphen on the keyboard, so I use a minus sign. But for lovers of variety, I can recommend:
Short dash (-) - the key next to the number 0.
Medium dash (–) - Alt + 0150 (on the numeric keyboard).
Long dash (—) - Alt + 0151 (on the numeric keyboard).
I only use them when someone‘s dialogue is being interrupted.What do you think of em dashes in a novel's text?
Personally, I find em dashes quite stylistic. It adds variety to the punctuations we already know: periods (.), commas (,), question (?) and exclamation marks (!), colons (:), semicolons (;) and the simple dash (-). A paragraph with multiple compound sentences that were punctuationed with just periods and commas are... Not as aesthetically pleasing as one with dashes.
What do you think?
Also, that is why you use ? ! & / and ‘’ “”.What do you think of em dashes in a novel's text?
Personally, I find em dashes quite stylistic. It adds variety to the punctuations we already know: periods (.), commas (,), question (?) and exclamation marks (!), colons (:), semicolons (;) and the simple dash (-). A paragraph with multiple compound sentences that were punctuationed with just periods and commas are... Not as aesthetically pleasing as one with dashes.
What do you think?
They aren't bad, just archaic. Semicolons, parentheses, and commas have replaced them entirely in modern writing, so when you use them, people will assume that you travelled a few centuries into the future or are AI.What do you think of em dashes in a novel's text?
Personally, I find em dashes quite stylistic. It adds variety to the punctuations we already know: periods (.), commas (,), question (?) and exclamation marks (!), colons (:), semicolons (;) and the simple dash (-). A paragraph with multiple compound sentences that were punctuationed with just periods and commas are... Not as aesthetically pleasing as one with dashes.
What do you think?
There's also (if you're on windows) Windows key + period. Pops up a window that lets you enter special characters—dashes, accented letters, emoji, kaomoji, all sorts of cool stuff. (Also, clipboard history.) Very useful.Hey, that's actually really cool. I didn't realize you could do that with a numeric keyboard. Thanks for the not-so-direct tip!
I feel a blend of punctuation creates a properly-flowing story. Em-dashes have their place. You just need to find where they fit over a pair of commas. Em-dashes sound like a completely derailed thought over one that smoothly flowed over to a new track. At least to me.I think em-dashes are lazy. You can use them to replace other punctuations so you don't have to think which ones to use.
Semicolon can mean the same thing as an m-dash
Confession, I didn't know what an Emdash was until ai, still don't really understand it now.
That' subjective. You didn't enjoy The Hobbit. I did. The book was written supremely well. That doesn't mean it was going to - or was meant to - capture everyone's enthusiasm.IMO
Nah, even before a.i., its always been trash.
And you know what?
The hobbit wasn't a very good book.
There i said it.
Confession, I didn't know what an Emdash was until ai, still don't really understand it now.
That' subjective. You didn't enjoy The Hobbit. I did. The book was written supremely well. That doesn't mean it was going to - or was meant to - capture everyone's enthusiasm.
Someone gets it XDAh, see there? That inserted shift away from consequence to intent inside the dashes? It's within the sentence rather than its own to avoid breaking the initial point of what they're saying. That's what I meant.
An Semicolon is very similar; it can be used in the same way, but it is more a parallel sentenceMaybe as a continuation, but I've never seen a semicolon used as an insert in the middle of a sentence... or maybe I drank that memory away?![]()