On 20 April 2010 18:17, Andrew Sullivan wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 06:06:57PM +0300, Dotan Cohen wrote:
>> These are contrived examples.
>
> I'm pretty sure that all the examples in Fowler are not contrived
> examples: they're real ones from real texts. And it's not as though
> Fowler wasn'
On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 06:06:57PM +0300, Dotan Cohen wrote:
> These are contrived examples.
I'm pretty sure that all the examples in Fowler are not contrived
examples: they're real ones from real texts. And it's not as though
Fowler wasn't pretty keen on clarity and elegance in prose.
> In eve
On 20 April 2010 17:12, Andrew Sullivan wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 01:57:13PM +, Paul Rubin wrote:
>> AFAIK "A, B and C" is the predominant usage in the U.S. (where, given the
>> state
>> of our educational system, we're lucky if we get the first comma). That's
>> what I
>> was taught
On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 01:57:13PM +, Paul Rubin wrote:
> AFAIK "A, B and C" is the predominant usage in the U.S. (where, given the
> state
> of our educational system, we're lucky if we get the first comma). That's
> what I
> was taught (in New York) (after the American Revolution). Can't s
Dotan Cohen writes:
>
> I have always understood this as:
> American English: A, B, and C
> British English: A, B and C
>
AFAIK "A, B and C" is the predominant usage in the U.S. (where, given the state
of our educational system, we're lucky if we get the first comma). That's what I
was taught
> "The meal consisted of soup, salad, and macaroni and cheese."
"The meal consisted of macaroni and cheese, soup, and salad."
Or, if the order is important:
"The meal consisted of soup, salad, and macaroni & cheese."
> "To my parents, Ayn Rand and God."
"To Ayn Rand, my parents, and God."
Or, i
I have always understood this as:
American English: A, B, and C
British English: A, B and C
--
Dotan Cohen
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http://what-is-what.com
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On 04/19/2010 04:57 PM, Marshall Feldman wrote:
Here's an example of what the CMS is talking about:
"The meal consisted of soup, salad, and macaroni and cheese."
Of course, the better known case is the panda, who eats, shoots and leaves.
rh
On Apr 19, 2010, at 4:18 PM, Uwe Stöhr wrote:
Am 19.04.2010 22:57, schrieb Marshall Feldman:
(By the way in English there is no comma before the "and" if the
part
after the "and" is the last enumeration in a sentence; like in
"A, B, C and D are letters.")
The following comes from the /Chi
Am 19.04.2010 22:57, schrieb Marshall Feldman:
(By the way in English there is no comma before the "and" if the part
after the "and" is the last enumeration in a sentence; like in
"A, B, C and D are letters.")
The following comes from the /Chicago Manual of Style/, 15th ed.,
section 6.18:
Whe
Thanks to everyone. I'll have to look at the Math manual.
I do, however, want to add one thing:
On 4/19/2010 4:09 PM, Uwe Stöhr wrote:
(By the way in English there is no comma before the "and" if the part
after the "and" is the last enumeration in a sentence; like in
"A, B, C and D are lette
Marshall Feldman writes:
>
> I have several questions regarding numbered equations:
>
>1. How does one add punctuation to numbered equations?
Inside the equations, you add punctuation the usual way. After the equation
numbers, you don't add punctuation. If you somehow succeed, the gods of
Am 19.04.2010 20:25, schrieb Marshall Feldman:
I have several questions regarding numbered equations:
At first, please have a look at LyX's Math manual that you find in LyX's
help menu. This will give you many info and answers.
1. How does one add punctuation to numbered equations?
What
On 04/19/2010 02:25 PM, Marshall Feldman wrote:
Hello,
I have several questions regarding numbered equations:
1. How does one add punctuation to numbered equations?
2. How does one make the equations be part of a paragraph that begins
before and continues after them?
3. How does one
Hello,
I have several questions regarding numbered equations:
1. How does one add punctuation to numbered equations?
2. How does one make the equations be part of a paragraph that begins
before and continues after them?
3. How does one continue a numbered equation across multiple line
/"When all else fails, read the manual"--/
So I did, and found how to prevent Lyx from centering numbered equations:
use the fleqn option in the Document Class under Settings.
This left-justifies the equations, which is not really what I wanted,
but it prevents the breaking up of the equation tha
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