It is funny you should say this. One of the guys i work with at a
partner company and I always say "include only one fact per email". :)

I try to do that but when requirements get complicated it can get hard.

--
David Connors
Software Engineer
Codify Pty Ltd - www.codify.com
Phone: +61 (7) 32106269 | Facsimilie: +61 (7) 32106269 Mobile: +61 417189363
Address Info: http://www.codify.com/AboutUs/ContactDetails
This message was sent from my phone. Please excuse the brevity.

On 26/02/2010, at 7:41 AM, David Richards
<ausdot...@davidsuniverse.com> wrote:

> Greetings all,
>
> Has anyone else noticed people often don't answer more than one
> question in an email?  In fact, I'll generalise that and say people
> often don't read an entire email.  I had this today (already) but this
> happens to me "all the time" (it's probably more like 25% of the time
> but I think the exaggeration is justified).
>
> This is particularly annoying when the main question isn't the first
> one (such as today's incident).  eg, "Please tell me A and B but I
> really want to know about C" will usually just get me the answer to A.
>
> I don't want to have to "twitterize" my emails into single sentences
> of a few small words.
>
> I wonder how many people on this list didn't get past the first
> sentence :)
>
> David
>
> "If we can hit that bullseye, the rest of the dominoes
> will fall like a house of cards... checkmate!"
> -Zapp Brannigan, Futurama

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