Posts with the tag « writing » :

🔗 Semantic Line Breaks

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When writing text with a compatible markup language, add a line break after each substantial unit of thought.

  1. Text written as plain text or a compatible markup language MAY use semantic line breaks.
  2. A semantic line break MUST NOT alter the final rendered output of the document.
  3. A semantic line break SHOULD NOT alter the intended meaning of the text.
  4. A semantic line break MUST occur after a sentence, as punctuated by a period (.), exclamation mark (!), or question mark (?).
  5. A semantic line break SHOULD occur after an independent clause as punctuated by a comma (,), semicolon (;), colon (:), or em dash (—).
  6. A semantic line break MAY occur after a dependent clause in order to clarify grammatical structure or satisfy line length constraints.
  7. A semantic line break is RECOMMENDED before an …

🔗 Enso - Write now, edit later.

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Ensō is a writing tool that helps you enter a state of flow.

It does this by separating writing from editing and thus making it harder for you to edit yourself.

As you write, the text fades away. It helps you focus on the now. Writing becomes similar to spoken language.

It is possible to add automatic text direction so it can support RTL languages by opening Firefox Inspect feature and adding dir="auto" in the main <textarea>

UPDATE: Developer responded to a DM on mastodon and added RTL support.

🔗 Academic Phrasebank

The Academic Phrasebank is a general resource for academic writers. It aims to provide you with examples of some of the phraseological "nuts and bolts" of writing organised under the headings to the left. It was designed primarily with international students whose first language is not English in mind. However, if you are a native speaker writer, you may still find parts of the material helpful.