Em dashes and emojis

  • hibsen@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    They’re pretty trivial to make in any OS — having a dedicated key isn’t necessary.

      • hibsen@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        Odd, I see them used all the time, and I’m neither. So I guess either my experience is an outlier, everyone I talk to is secretly an LLM, or maybe the meme is pushing an easy conclusion because people in general are bad at picking up on LLM responses and want an easy punctuation mark so they don’t have to think.

        • isolatedscotch@discuss.tchncs.de
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          11 hours ago

          I see them used all the time

          Weird, i hardly ever see a normal hyphen, let alone an em dash, but of course it’s not a foolproof method to detect ai, just a strong indicator

      • hibsen@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        I think this is something macOS does best — using shift+option hyphen is a bit quicker than alt+0151.

        • exasperation@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          11 hours ago

          Long pressing the hyphen on the Google keyboard on Android also gives the option of selecting an en dash or em dash.

          On Linux, if you have the compose key enabled, Compose key + three hyphens in a row will generate an em dash (en dash is two hyphens).

          • hibsen@lemmy.world
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            11 hours ago

            …well I’m definitely turning that on for my Linux machine then. Thanks for the tip.

            • exasperation@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              11 hours ago

              It’s convenient for a lot of things. Curly quotes, specialized dashes, mathematical symbols or Greek letters used in math/science, foreign currencies, things like paragraph symbols (¶) or section symbols (§), etc.