01110111 01101000 01100001 01110100 00100111 01110011 00100000 01110100 01101000 01100101 00100000 01100100 01100101 01100001 01101100 00111111
edit - honestly not a troll. is it the specific formatting of “em” dashes? i know for sure we use them all the time. or at least i do. but they’re just dashes to me, so…
Ai doesn’t use a hypen, and it doesn’t put space between the words and the dash.
For example, If I were using a dash - I’d use it like this.
Ai uses it—like this.
So, AI uses it correctly.
Yes, and people think that using it correctly is a sign of Ai now.
Holy crap, I’ve been an AI all this time!
Be cool, man, be cool–maybe they won’t be able to tell…
They know! Cheese it!
Interesting. I use them like this — looks cleaner with spaces.
The AI models I’ve seen DO put spaces before and after the dash—that’s how I’ve been able to suss out LLM posts in the past. I never put spaces because it’s WRONG!
…microsoft applications have an annoying habit of auto-replacing my dashes with emdashes; i don’t even know how to type an emdash…
I prefer En dash – which is used in German
grammartypography with spacing. Which seems much more readable to me.In English, en dashes are for ranges like between 2.5–7.5, or from Feb–July. Em dashes are to show connective thoughts, is it truly different in German or just your preference?
It’s different in German.
We use En with spacing for thoughts, interruptions, and apparently can also be used for ranges (recommended by standards, but a popular spelling source has ranges without spacing, sometimes used with reduced spacing).