Re: Different ways to reply to a post.
Faux Pas, on host 138.89.76.247
Friday, February 9, 2001, at 20:08:58
Different ways to reply to a post. posted by Quartz on Friday, February 9, 2001, at 19:41:34:
> I've started to pick this habit up myself. Yet on other forums I'm on they merely delete the entire last message and type away with their own stuff. The whole reason I brought this up is because I want to know why you guys write replies this way, and if you always did. I'm intrigued. > > Qua "has nothing better to do than closely inspect message forum replies" rtz > ~~*Q*~~
This is how it was always done, back in the infancy of usenet*. To assist the reader's recollections of what was said, there would be a quoted part signified by a > (or |) and the new poster would reply underneath the quoted part.
However, with the onset of Outlook and Outlook Express, you have people replying before the quoted part (or rather, the original message). This caused people to read the new stuff first and, on a long string of messages, old orignal messages would be stacked underneath, never to be read.
Most likely, the ones who delete the whole postings are used to almost instantaneous replies to messages or they assume that if you've gone this far into a message thread you have already read the messages and don't need a recap.
I prefer the old way -- although it seems like I spend all my time at this message board, I don't. It's nice to know what's being referenced.
It also avoids a sense of superiority. If I didn't quote you, it would imply that I don't feel that what you said was important -- here is what I say, and that's what you need to hear. By keeping something of what you said, I'm replying to you; it's a dialogue.
-Faux "*by infancy of usenet, I'm talking about 1990, when there were about 2000 usenet newsgroups. rec.arts.comics would get something like a whopping 250 posts a day." Pas
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