I see a lot of professional writers (and editors) take positions on things like fonts and the Oxford comma, but it mostly seems to be ... less than entirely serious. I think they care about them--especially things like the Oxford comma, that are actually stylistic--but I think they're maybe a little less likely to choose them as hills to die on than non-writers think they are, and I think much of the ... posturing they do around them is at least mostly for laughs.I feel like fonts and the Oxford comma aren't things that professional writers care about, just people who would like to think that, in another life, they could have been professional writers.
I see a lot of dotcom guys with strong opinions about the Oxford comma, while simultaneously being the type to just have Google Gemini compose all their emails anyway.
Also, justice for Verdana, the great forgotten hero of the early internet age.
As someone whose previous job involved a lot of technical writing I can say, with a fair amount of certainly, that the Oxford Comma is a necessityI feel like fonts and the Oxford comma aren't things that professional writers care about, just people who would like to think that, in another life, they could have been professional writers.
I see a lot of dotcom guys with strong opinions about the Oxford comma, while simultaneously being the type to just have Google Gemini compose all their emails anyway.
Also, justice for Verdana, the great forgotten hero of the early internet age.
You'd be surprised.I feel like fonts and the Oxford comma aren't things that professional writers care about, just people who would like to think that, in another life, they could have been professional writers.
I feel like fonts and the Oxford comma aren't things that professional writers care about...
I feel like fonts and the Oxford comma aren't things that professional writers care about, just people who would like to think that, in another life, they could have been professional writers.
I see a lot of dotcom guys with strong opinions about the Oxford comma, while simultaneously being the type to just have Google Gemini compose all their emails anyway.
Also, justice for Verdana, the great forgotten hero of the early internet age.
I feel like fonts and the Oxford comma aren't things that professional writers care about, just people who would like to think that, in another life, they could have been professional writers.
I always fill out my COMSEC (COMmunication SECurity) paperwork ...