At 02:10 PM 1/16/2003 -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Got any clue as to what the thread was titled so that I can dig it up in the archives so as not to raise old issues?If I'm holding the book and have no computer next to me, how can I tell what is OGC? I can't. Therefore it is not clearly identified. IMHO. Opinions vary widely on this subject though. I fall into the 10 year old with a highlighter camp: If a 10 year old with a highlighter cannot perfectly highlight the OGC and not highlight the non-OGC, it isn't clear.
BTW -- why was this method rejected -- on the grounds that they considered:
b) on the grounds that the OGC is somehow not clearly identified?
I would think that extracting most all of the OGC onto CD-ROM would make it extremely clear what the OGC was, perhaps even moreso that a textual description, and certainly without the formatting weirdness many developers use to mix PI and OGC.
That's why I generally use 100% OGC in my works. PI will protect my nouns if I need them protected.
Joe Mucchiello
Throwing Dice Games
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