River: The human body can be drained of blood in 8.6 seconds given adequate vacuuming systems. Mal: See, morbid and creepifying, I got no problem with, long as she does it quiet-like.

'Safe'


Spike's Bitches 21 Gunn Salute  

[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.


libkitty - Jan 15, 2005 2:26:15 pm PST #4601 of 10002
Embrace the idea that we are the leaders we've been looking for. Grace Lee Boggs

I must get ready to go to a movie. Life is rough that way on three day weekends.


Strix - Jan 15, 2005 2:26:16 pm PST #4602 of 10002
A dress should be tight enough to show you're a woman but loose enough to flee from zombies. — Ginger

What Steph said. I understand numbers are symbols, because letters are words are arbitrary agreed-upon signifiers, too.


Polter-Cow - Jan 15, 2005 2:26:26 pm PST #4603 of 10002
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

but what does the trad quotes>

What are you trying to ask here? It may not be coming out.

Isn't it more that *numbers* are constant -- 2 apples will always be 2 apples and not twice as many, not ever -- but that the *symbols* used to describe them are arbitrary? The 2, the 4, the i?

Yeah, that's what I think, but I think there are some people who believe even that part's not true.


Strix - Jan 15, 2005 2:27:20 pm PST #4604 of 10002
A dress should be tight enough to show you're a woman but loose enough to flee from zombies. — Ginger

Basically. how do you do trad quotes? Not italics.


Polter-Cow - Jan 15, 2005 2:29:27 pm PST #4605 of 10002
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Basically. how do you do trad quotes?

You mean like what I just did to your statement? You use the right caret, >, followed by your quoted material. I think that's what ita described. Or are "trad quotes" something I don't know?


§ ita § - Jan 15, 2005 2:29:45 pm PST #4606 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

So (doohickey i doohickey) does italics, but what does the trad quotes> I've never been able to figure that one out.

If I type this:

My cat is
i so
annoying...

It gets translated into:

My cat is <i>so</i> annoying...

and displays like:

My cat is so annoying...

Traditional quoting is more complicated. It means that this:

>2 apples will always be 2 apples

translates to the following HTML:

<blockquote><tt>2 apples will always be 2 apples</tt></blockquote>

and displays like:

2 apples will always be 2 apples


Stephanie - Jan 15, 2005 2:29:48 pm PST #4607 of 10002
Trust my rage

You put the > before what you want quoted.

GUaranteed to be a x-post.


Strix - Jan 15, 2005 2:30:10 pm PST #4608 of 10002
A dress should be tight enough to show you're a woman but loose enough to flee from zombies. — Ginger

Like this?

Did it! Yeah, team me!

Thanks, guys.


Polter-Cow - Jan 15, 2005 2:31:33 pm PST #4609 of 10002
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Ta da!


Hil R. - Jan 15, 2005 2:31:46 pm PST #4610 of 10002
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

Isn't it more that *numbers* are constant -- 2 apples will always be 2 apples and not twice as many, not ever -- but that the *symbols* used to describe them are arbitrary? The 2, the 4, the i?

Well, define 2. Not the symbol, but the concept it's signifying. There's nothing physical you can point to and say, "That's a 2." You can do math as just a symbolic way of describing the physical world -- 2 is the concept of one object plus another of the same object -- but that gets pretty limited pretty quickly. There gets to be a point where you're using the numbers to represent pure concepts that can't be represented physically.