<sigh>

“Wrong.” I have heard that word a lot in my life. Once it was “wrong” to not 
double space between sentences. It was “wrong” to eat spaghetti with a spoon. 
It was “wrong” to ride my bike on the sidewalk. It was “wrong” to pee with the 
toilet seat down. Okay, that’s still wrong! But you get my drift. “Wrong” is 
sometimes only a way of saying, “This is the way we think people on the whole 
should behave in this specific circumstance”.

I think that what you must mean by, “wrong” is, “presently inconvenient to me”, 
but as Richmond pointed out, what is inconvenient for one may be standard 
operating procedure for another. I don’t want to belabor the point, but if some 
committee of persons sat around a table and actually wrote an RFC about how 
quoted text MUST be top down in an email or else it was just “wrong”, then I am 
inclined to disregard their notions, and symbolically give them the raspberry! 
Has anyone actually explained to these people that they can actually have a 
LIFE?

Now in a list like this, most people who read it I think are fairly familiar 
with the topics they are interested in, and do not really need to see all the 
quoted text, and while I again quite agree that only relative parts *should* be 
quoted, I am a long, long way from telling anyone here how wrong they are to 
quote everything, and while once I griped about the direction they were 
quoting, because I would get mixed quotes from different people who quoted in 
opposite directions making the thread of conversation hopelessly muddled, I 
won’t even go so far as to say THAT is wrong. It’s simply “presently 
inconvenient to me.”

Bob


On Mar 20, 2014, at 19:53 , Dr. Hawkins 
<doch...@gmail.com<mailto:doch...@gmail.com>> wrote:

I agree that people should select the pertinent text to be quoted before
replying. It's just good email etiquette.


It's more than "good etiquette." it's correct, and not doing it is
incorrect.  This is spelled out in the ancient RFC that defines email.


However, there may be an option to reverse the direction of the quoted
text to place it at the top instead of the bottom of the post.


Top-quoting is not an "option," it's just plain wrong.

It came about from AOL placing the cursor before the text, an abuse
followed by microsoft and gmail.

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