gemini-request at lists.orbitalfox.eu wrote: > Message: 6 > Date: Sun, 31 May 2020 20:21:17 +1000 > From: Thomas Karpiniec<tkarpiniec at icloud.com> > To: Gemini application layer protocol<gemini at lists.orbitalfox.eu> > Subject: Re: Ambiguity in unordered list item definition > Message-ID:<20200531102117.GA48485 at allanon.local> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii > > All makes sense to me! > > On Sun, May 31, 2020 at 10:09:46AM +0000, solderpunk wrote: >> Solutions that don't involve changing the spec: >> >> * Authors could take care to introduce a leading space before text lines >> which begin with emphasised words. >> * Geminispace could adopt a convention of emphasising words like_this_ >> instead of like*this* (or any other way not involving *s). > I didn't think of such a simple workaround (the leading space). You're > right, I expect it would become common knowledge that you have to look > out for that while composing gemini text. > > Not worth making breaking changes for in any case. > > Cheers, > > Tom Doesn't it make more sense to do the *reverse* (see what I did there?), by requiring bullet lines to have a space *after* the *? Because the normal standard for "ascii bold" has no spaces between the leading * and the bolded word, as you can see in my mail (if it hasn't been already rendered in bold by your mail program. It would make sense for a bullet to be a space away from the text it is bulleting, so that ^[[:star:]][[:space:]] would be a bulleted list, while [[:star:]]Thing I want to emphasize[[:star:]] So only really sloppy ascii-type text would break this, and so then maybe it should. And most bulleters would be doing this already (I see that that's what I did for my bullets, I'm used to mediawiki, and markdown is the same https://wordpress.com/support/markdown-quick-reference/ Bullet Lists * Item * Item
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