Ihor Radchenko <yanta...@posteo.net> writes:
> Ruijie Yu <rui...@netyu.xyz> writes: > >>> May I know why you use comment here and in similar places? This >>> @@comment:...@@ thing is a bit of a hack as it is actually representing >>> inline export snippet to non-existent "comment" export backend. >>> >>> I am not sure why this has been even added originally. >> >> I saw the existing inline comments somewhere and started to use it as >> well. I don't have a strong opinion as to whether the comments should >> be kept or removed. > > I have no strong opinion either. You can do whatever is easier. Since it adds nothing to the export, and removing it adds a bit of extra work for me, I'll leave it at the current state and avoid adding new inline comments of this kind. >>>> + 3. 调料 >>>> + + 糖 >>>> + + 盐 >>> >>> That's a curious seasoning for omelet, but so be it ;) >> >> Well, I didn't have omelet-making in mind, and was just trying to >> replace cheese with something more common. >> >> [Wait, omelets require milk?] > > Some people do add it. For example, see the discussion in > https://old.reddit.com/r/Cooking/comments/t188k9/egg_milk_ratio_for_omelets/ Can't easily access that link, but I'll take your word for it. :) >>>> -Worried about aligning free text tables? >>>> -Org mode does it in a single keystroke -- =tab=. >>>> +担心无法在文本表格中对齐?你只需按一个键 ----- =tab=。 >>> >>> May I know the purpose of adding extra "-"? >> >> Double-dash only renders as a short dash on HTML, whereas quintuple-dash >> yields a long dash. This is more in the spirit of Chinese writing, >> because we usually use two full-width dashes as a "dash punctuation". > > Maybe just use \mdash entity then? Sure, I find double-\mdash looks good on HTML as well. -- Best, RY [Please note that this mail might go to spam due to some misconfiguration in my mail server -- still investigating.]