20 lines
1.2 KiB
Plaintext
20 lines
1.2 KiB
Plaintext
top-post
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n. , v. [common] To put the newly-added portion of an email or Usenet
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response before the quoted part, as opposed to the more logical sequence of
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quoted portion first with original following. The problem with this practice
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is neatly summed up by the following FAQ entry: A: No. Q: Should I include
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quotations after my reply? This term is generally used pejoratively with the
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implication that the offending person is a newbie , a Microsoft addict
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(Microsoft mail tools produce a similar format by default), or simply a
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common-and-garden-variety idiot. One major problem with top-posting is that
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people who do it all too frequently quote the entire parent message rather
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than trimming it down to those portions relevent to their reply this makes
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threads bulky and unnecessarily difficult to read and arouses the righteous
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ire of experienced Internet residents (this style is called TOFU for text
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over, fullquote under , or sometimes jeopardy-style quoting ). Another
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problem is that top-posters often word their replies on the assumption that
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you just read the previous message, even though their perversity has put it
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further down the page than you have yet read. Oppose bottom-post.
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