←back to thread

650 points Stratoscope | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.209s | source
Show context
mmooss ◴[] No.43499567[source]
Here's an easy, if not always precise way to remember:

* Hyphens connect things, such as compound words: double-decker, cut-and-dried, 212-555-5555.

* EN dashes make a range between things: Boston–San Francisco flight, 10–20 years: both connect not only the endpoints, but define that all the space between is included. (Compare the last usage with the phone number example under Hyphens.)

* EM dashes break things, such as sentences or thoughts: 'What the—!'; A paragraph should express one idea—but rules are made to be broken.

Unicode has the original ASCII hyphen-minus (U+002d), as well as a dedicated hyphen (U+2010), other functional hyphens such as soft and non-breaking hyphens, and a dedicated minus sign (U+2212), and some variations of minus such as subscript, superscript, etc.

There's also the figure dash "‒" (U+2012), essentally a hyphen-minus that's the same width as numbers and used aesthetically for typsetting, afaik. And don't overlook two-em-dashes "⸺" and three-em-dashes "⸻" and horizontal bars "―", the latter used like quotation marks!

replies(12): >>43499795 #>>43500096 #>>43500276 #>>43500389 #>>43500958 #>>43501074 #>>43502495 #>>43503176 #>>43504564 #>>43507109 #>>43512927 #>>43570687 #
energy123 ◴[] No.43500389[source]
The em dash is now a GPT-ism and is not advisable unless you want people to think your writing is the output of a LLM.
replies(9): >>43500409 #>>43500523 #>>43500587 #>>43500833 #>>43501522 #>>43501593 #>>43503214 #>>43505661 #>>43506613 #
1. nkotov ◴[] No.43505661[source]
Recently ran into this. Didn't realize it was that obvious.