On Tuesday 03 April 2007 18:15:07 Bayrouni wrote: > Sylvain Chouleur a écrit : > > 1) I'm sorry but don't understand what 'top post' means > > When you reply don't write your message at the top but at the bottom. > just at the bottom. > > In other words, write at the last line.
Well, that's somewhat better, but still not ideal. top post: v. 1. Writing your entire reply to a message (generally email or newsgroup posting) above any quoted material you are replying to. bottom post: v. 1. Writing your entire reply to a message (generally email or newsgroup posting) below any quoted material you are replying to. Top posting is generally considered either wasteful, if the quoted part isn't required, or confusing, since the answers to questions will appear the questions themselves and the "conversation" will generally be read in the wrong order. This being said, top posting is preferred in some fora. Top posting is a common beginner (see n00b) behavior in the face of properly behaving email/newsgroup client (see below). At least one mail client (Microsoft Outlook) makes it intentionally difficult to not to top post, though cursor, signature, and quoted material placement AND non-standard quoting methods. Bottom posting is preferred over top posting in most fora, but is still wasteful especially in combination with "me too" posts, in which the volume of quoted (and thus at least partially redundant) material greatly dwarfs the amount of unquoted (and ideally original) material. The most preferred method of replying is sometimes called "interleaved posting". In this case you quote only the relevant parts of the message you are replying to, leaving only enough information to provide a context for your material. The appropriate amount of quoted material can differ greatly based on the fora for which the message is intended. Your material is placed after what it is replying to, which might be before other quoted material. Here's an example: --- Begin Example --- >> I've filed bug XXX against foo/bar-1.1_pre2; it breaks some of my scripts >> I wrote against foo/bar-1.0 > > That's not a bug. It's a feature. > Riposte A I see the security implications, but I've attached a patch that retains the 1.0 behavior while addressing the buffer overflow risk in a future-proof manner. > Riposte C This is the problem with open source software. The %#$@ developers want it to be broken. That's a stupid point and you should be ashamed for presenting it. --- End Example --- In the example above, the "Riposte B" text was dropped since the message contained no direct reply to it. A properly behaving email/newsgroup client, in absence of other user preferences, should quote the entire message being replied to (the format=flowed RFC covers acceptable quoting methods), place the user's cursor at the top (or slightly above) the quoted material, and automatically insert the content of the users signature (on UNIX, baring other configuration, this is in contents of the file $HOME/.sig) below the quoted material after the standard signature separator ('-- ' on it's own line). The user will then, move down the message, deleting quoted material irrelevant to their reply and writing their content immediately after the relevent quoted material and stopping when they reach the signature separator. New users often simply type their reply, without touching the quoted material resulting in a top post (see above). -- Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. ,= ,-_-. =. [EMAIL PROTECTED] ((_/)o o(\_)) ICQ: 514984 YM/AIM: DaTwinkDaddy `-'(. .)`-' http://iguanasuicide.org/ \_/
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