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Programming > Pascal Mac > *** Welcome to ...
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*** Welcome to comp.lang.pascal.mac ***

by Bill M Catambay <supportNOSPAM@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Mar 5, 2005 at 03:10 AM

=======  WELCOME NEW USERS =======

                       TO COMP.LANG.PASCAL.MAC !

PURPOSE

This is the group for discussion on Macintosh Pascals, including apple 
Pascal, Think Pascal, CodeWarrior Pascal, Language Systems Pascal and
others. All aspects of Pascal on the Macintosh are discussed.

HISTORY OF THE GROUP

This group was created by popular vote on June 12, 1995.

POSTING GUIDELINES

The subject line says it all ! Read only the messages you are
interested in. Leave the rest. Although sometimes the subject may
not really say what is in the posting, this is not common.
Try to remember how much trouble you have had reading postings
when YOU post:

   - Put as much information as you can in the subject line !
     Subjects like "help me" or "question about Pascal" are
     junk mail -- they really don't deserve an answer.

   - Don't keep adding replies to a thread (a thread is a chain
     of replies) where the subject of conversation no longer
     matches the subject title. Nobody wants to read posts about
     "array indexing in Pascal" only to find that the topic
     actually turned long ago into "why is the customer service
     line always busy". The standard ethic here is to rename
     the subject line and place the old subject after it, as:

        Subject: Array indexing in Pascal

     becomes:

        Subject: Customer service should be shot (was: Array
                 indexing in Pascal)

   - Arguments are fun ! But everyone knows when you step across
     the line from "fun" to "flame". If you call someone a name
     (and remember "idiot" is as bad a word as any other on the
     Usenet) or engage in personal attacks, what you will find
     is that people rapidly abandon the thread. People have
     better things to do.
     Arguing is an ART; flaming is the flush of a toilet.

   - Keep the conversation ON Usenet ! All to often I get personal
     mail about a posting asking further questions. Other people
     might need to know that information too ! Also, I might not
     know the answer, or someone else might know something in
     addition. Keeping the conversation public allows all this
     to happen.

     If you are having a personal problem with someone on the
     Usenet (if you are a regular, it is going to happen), it
     might seem to be a good idea to send private mail to that
     person, and take your argument out of public view. It isn't.
     Private mail is unfortunately used to deliver threats,
     mail so offensive or obscene that the mailer would be
     embarrassed to show it in public, anonymous pranks, etc.
     Send personal mail to friends; drop arguments. They are
     not worth pursuing.

     Similarly, posting messages asking for replies to be mailed
     is poor form. Others may need the information you are requesting.
     in any event, you are asking people to send advice that they
     might post to the benefit of all, and perhaps save themselves
     from mailing again and again and again...

   - Read before you post ! It actually happens quite a bit that
     people ask questions that have been answered only a few
     posts back ! This occurs because people post without bothering
     to read any of the existing posts.

     In addition, most groups have a FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)
     list. If you have never read a FAQ, do so ! The FAQs are the
     most fun reading on the Usenet. Far from being lectures, most
     FAQs are a "best of the posts" do***ent that really gives
     interesting information, sometimes information you will not
     find elsewhere (see for example the "alt.2600" FAQ :).

   - Be aware of limits. Many newsreaders have difficulty with subject
     lines over 40 characters (which get chopped up). Try to keep
     your posting text lines to 78 characters or LESS. If you use more,
     your posts will look stupid because they will keep overflowing the 
     line and creating and unnecessary extra line.

     If you have an editor that automatically "wraps" your lines into 
     80 character format, you may be unaware that your whole message 
     is just one big line, which looks really stupid and annoying to
     people who don't use word wrap. I have a feature like that on 
     my reader. It works great for dealing with other people's posts
     that exceed the 78 character limit, but tends to make you forget
     when you are composing posts. I turn it off.

     When placing large posts, be aware that some folks have limits
     on how large a post they can accept. It is customary to break
     down large posts.

     Although it is a contentious issue, I don't personally think
     it is the end of the world to post large messages. If you have
     one of the common problems with your news provider/reader, such as
     inability to read large posts, or rapid disposal of old posts,
     or charging the daylights out of you even for posts you aren't
     reading, you are either getting your service free, or you are
     being ripped off by a bad apple provider. Either way, it is not
     the posters fault. Personally, I get annoyed at having to read
     or download a post that has been broken into a million pieces.
     Note also that a bad news provider is something you can get
     around ! There are public news servers. See:

        http://sunsite.unc.edu/usenet-i/home.html

   - Be tolerant. The Internet is pretty black and white on one issue:
     if you cannot develop a thick skin here, you will not be
     comfortable. 

     Does that poster really need to be told that he misspelled a
     word ? Will you lose sleep tonight because someone posted
     a stretched or broken fact ? There is nothing here as sad as
     seeing an obvious newcomer get flamed for asking a stupid
     question. Everyone was new once (well, except for me :)

   - Use the WEB ! format. Using Web browsers is the up and coming
     way to access the newsgroups. If you put web references
     in the standard form, usually one of:

        http://www.thisplace.com
        
        ftp://ftp.nowhere.com

     People's browsers will see this, highlight it in blue (or other
     color). Then, they can click on it for instant access to the
     site you are referencing ! 

Finally,

Because the Usenet (Usenet is the name of the Internet news posting
service in general) operates without censor****p on a faceless and
sometimes nameless basis, people sometimes seem to have no problem
leaving messages that they would not dare read in person. Other times,
facts are stretched and promises made that won't come true.
People say that society naturally sinks to it's lowest level without
accountability.

But keep this in mind: when everyone is being rude, taking the extra
time to be polite and keeping your word will make you truly stand
out from the mob.

-- 
Bill Catambay, Software Developer                     
Pascal Central -> http://pascal-central.com/
           
ExcaliburWorld -> http://excaliburworld.com/
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
*** Welcome to comp.lang.pascal.mac ***
Bill M Catambay <suppo  2005-03-05 03:10:12 

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tan12V112 Sat Jul 26 5:49:53 CDT 2008.