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  3. Terminology: what are good unambiguous names for the two senses of the word "column", when printing text in a monospaced font?

Terminology: what are good unambiguous names for the two senses of the word "column", when printing text in a monospaced font?

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  • simontatham@hachyderm.ioS simontatham@hachyderm.io

    Terminology: what are good unambiguous names for the two senses of the word "column", when printing text in a monospaced font?

    If someone says "2 columns" or "3 columns", they mean it in the sense that a newspaper is laid out in multiple columns – you read to the bottom of the first column before starting from the top of the next.

    But if they say "80 columns" or "132 columns", they mean the number of monospaced character cells that fit across one line of text _within_ one of those columns.

    If you need, for example, a command-line option for each of these, and you don't want to call either option '--columns' because that's ambiguous, what _do_ you call each one?

    Particularly the first one (2 or 3 columns). I haven't come up with any good description for it that doesn't involve a definition by negatives. "Number of columns, no, not in that sense, the other sense."

    autkin@fosstodon.orgA This user is from outside of this forum
    autkin@fosstodon.orgA This user is from outside of this forum
    autkin@fosstodon.org
    wrote last edited by
    #3

    @simontatham See "field" as `awk` or `cut` use the word https://www.gnu.org/software/gawk/manual/html_node/Fields.html

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    • simontatham@hachyderm.ioS simontatham@hachyderm.io

      Terminology: what are good unambiguous names for the two senses of the word "column", when printing text in a monospaced font?

      If someone says "2 columns" or "3 columns", they mean it in the sense that a newspaper is laid out in multiple columns – you read to the bottom of the first column before starting from the top of the next.

      But if they say "80 columns" or "132 columns", they mean the number of monospaced character cells that fit across one line of text _within_ one of those columns.

      If you need, for example, a command-line option for each of these, and you don't want to call either option '--columns' because that's ambiguous, what _do_ you call each one?

      Particularly the first one (2 or 3 columns). I haven't come up with any good description for it that doesn't involve a definition by negatives. "Number of columns, no, not in that sense, the other sense."

      tuftyindigo@meow.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
      tuftyindigo@meow.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
      tuftyindigo@meow.social
      wrote last edited by
      #4

      @simontatham Use the same option with an heuristic that a single-digit number is page splits and a multi-digit number is line length. If you want to specify both, pass the option multiple times.

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      • simontatham@hachyderm.ioS simontatham@hachyderm.io

        Terminology: what are good unambiguous names for the two senses of the word "column", when printing text in a monospaced font?

        If someone says "2 columns" or "3 columns", they mean it in the sense that a newspaper is laid out in multiple columns – you read to the bottom of the first column before starting from the top of the next.

        But if they say "80 columns" or "132 columns", they mean the number of monospaced character cells that fit across one line of text _within_ one of those columns.

        If you need, for example, a command-line option for each of these, and you don't want to call either option '--columns' because that's ambiguous, what _do_ you call each one?

        Particularly the first one (2 or 3 columns). I haven't come up with any good description for it that doesn't involve a definition by negatives. "Number of columns, no, not in that sense, the other sense."

        erincandescent@akko.erincandescent.netE This user is from outside of this forum
        erincandescent@akko.erincandescent.netE This user is from outside of this forum
        erincandescent@akko.erincandescent.net
        wrote last edited by
        #5

        @simontatham --column-width --column-count?

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        • simontatham@hachyderm.ioS simontatham@hachyderm.io

          Terminology: what are good unambiguous names for the two senses of the word "column", when printing text in a monospaced font?

          If someone says "2 columns" or "3 columns", they mean it in the sense that a newspaper is laid out in multiple columns – you read to the bottom of the first column before starting from the top of the next.

          But if they say "80 columns" or "132 columns", they mean the number of monospaced character cells that fit across one line of text _within_ one of those columns.

          If you need, for example, a command-line option for each of these, and you don't want to call either option '--columns' because that's ambiguous, what _do_ you call each one?

          Particularly the first one (2 or 3 columns). I haven't come up with any good description for it that doesn't involve a definition by negatives. "Number of columns, no, not in that sense, the other sense."

          mair@mathstodon.xyzM This user is from outside of this forum
          mair@mathstodon.xyzM This user is from outside of this forum
          mair@mathstodon.xyz
          wrote last edited by
          #6

          @simontatham "... in the sense that a newspaper is laid out..." -- something with "layout", for that one?

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          • simontatham@hachyderm.ioS simontatham@hachyderm.io

            Terminology: what are good unambiguous names for the two senses of the word "column", when printing text in a monospaced font?

            If someone says "2 columns" or "3 columns", they mean it in the sense that a newspaper is laid out in multiple columns – you read to the bottom of the first column before starting from the top of the next.

            But if they say "80 columns" or "132 columns", they mean the number of monospaced character cells that fit across one line of text _within_ one of those columns.

            If you need, for example, a command-line option for each of these, and you don't want to call either option '--columns' because that's ambiguous, what _do_ you call each one?

            Particularly the first one (2 or 3 columns). I haven't come up with any good description for it that doesn't involve a definition by negatives. "Number of columns, no, not in that sense, the other sense."

            ahnlak@kavlak.ukA This user is from outside of this forum
            ahnlak@kavlak.ukA This user is from outside of this forum
            ahnlak@kavlak.uk
            wrote last edited by
            #7

            @simontatham I tend to think of the second form as "width" rather than "columns" (I probably blame diff(1) for this)

            Actually diff(1) does the first form nicely to, by defining it as "side by side"

            simontatham@hachyderm.ioS 1 Reply Last reply
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            • simontatham@hachyderm.ioS simontatham@hachyderm.io

              Terminology: what are good unambiguous names for the two senses of the word "column", when printing text in a monospaced font?

              If someone says "2 columns" or "3 columns", they mean it in the sense that a newspaper is laid out in multiple columns – you read to the bottom of the first column before starting from the top of the next.

              But if they say "80 columns" or "132 columns", they mean the number of monospaced character cells that fit across one line of text _within_ one of those columns.

              If you need, for example, a command-line option for each of these, and you don't want to call either option '--columns' because that's ambiguous, what _do_ you call each one?

              Particularly the first one (2 or 3 columns). I haven't come up with any good description for it that doesn't involve a definition by negatives. "Number of columns, no, not in that sense, the other sense."

              rogerlipscombe@hachyderm.ioR This user is from outside of this forum
              rogerlipscombe@hachyderm.ioR This user is from outside of this forum
              rogerlipscombe@hachyderm.io
              wrote last edited by
              #8

              @simontatham I'd probably go with compound words: `--column-width` and `--column-count`

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              • ahnlak@kavlak.ukA ahnlak@kavlak.uk

                @simontatham I tend to think of the second form as "width" rather than "columns" (I probably blame diff(1) for this)

                Actually diff(1) does the first form nicely to, by defining it as "side by side"

                simontatham@hachyderm.ioS This user is from outside of this forum
                simontatham@hachyderm.ioS This user is from outside of this forum
                simontatham@hachyderm.io
                wrote last edited by
                #9

                @ahnlak yes. But the problem is that _some_ people think of it as "columns", or at least are used to seeing that terminology. So they read your --help to the point where they see a --columns option, and then they think "ah, that must be where I write 132", and next thing they know, the program has either aborted with a bizarre layout failure, or worse still, succeeded!

                ahnlak@kavlak.ukA 1 Reply Last reply
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                • simontatham@hachyderm.ioS simontatham@hachyderm.io

                  Terminology: what are good unambiguous names for the two senses of the word "column", when printing text in a monospaced font?

                  If someone says "2 columns" or "3 columns", they mean it in the sense that a newspaper is laid out in multiple columns – you read to the bottom of the first column before starting from the top of the next.

                  But if they say "80 columns" or "132 columns", they mean the number of monospaced character cells that fit across one line of text _within_ one of those columns.

                  If you need, for example, a command-line option for each of these, and you don't want to call either option '--columns' because that's ambiguous, what _do_ you call each one?

                  Particularly the first one (2 or 3 columns). I haven't come up with any good description for it that doesn't involve a definition by negatives. "Number of columns, no, not in that sense, the other sense."

                  amonakov@mastodon.gamedev.placeA This user is from outside of this forum
                  amonakov@mastodon.gamedev.placeA This user is from outside of this forum
                  amonakov@mastodon.gamedev.place
                  wrote last edited by
                  #10

                  @simontatham
                  --layout-columns
                  --line-length

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                  • simontatham@hachyderm.ioS simontatham@hachyderm.io

                    @ahnlak yes. But the problem is that _some_ people think of it as "columns", or at least are used to seeing that terminology. So they read your --help to the point where they see a --columns option, and then they think "ah, that must be where I write 132", and next thing they know, the program has either aborted with a bizarre layout failure, or worse still, succeeded!

                    ahnlak@kavlak.ukA This user is from outside of this forum
                    ahnlak@kavlak.ukA This user is from outside of this forum
                    ahnlak@kavlak.uk
                    wrote last edited by
                    #11

                    @simontatham ahh, the old "users only read half of the important information" quandry 😉

                    `--width` and `--lanes` maybe, although I'm not a huge fan of 'lanes'.

                    Or just give them a single column and let 'em pipe it through some awk abomination if they don't like it!

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                    • simontatham@hachyderm.ioS simontatham@hachyderm.io

                      Terminology: what are good unambiguous names for the two senses of the word "column", when printing text in a monospaced font?

                      If someone says "2 columns" or "3 columns", they mean it in the sense that a newspaper is laid out in multiple columns – you read to the bottom of the first column before starting from the top of the next.

                      But if they say "80 columns" or "132 columns", they mean the number of monospaced character cells that fit across one line of text _within_ one of those columns.

                      If you need, for example, a command-line option for each of these, and you don't want to call either option '--columns' because that's ambiguous, what _do_ you call each one?

                      Particularly the first one (2 or 3 columns). I haven't come up with any good description for it that doesn't involve a definition by negatives. "Number of columns, no, not in that sense, the other sense."

                      rogerbw@discordian.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
                      rogerbw@discordian.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
                      rogerbw@discordian.social
                      wrote last edited by
                      #12

                      @simontatham "X-character lines" "a Y-column layout".

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                      0
                      • simontatham@hachyderm.ioS simontatham@hachyderm.io

                        Terminology: what are good unambiguous names for the two senses of the word "column", when printing text in a monospaced font?

                        If someone says "2 columns" or "3 columns", they mean it in the sense that a newspaper is laid out in multiple columns – you read to the bottom of the first column before starting from the top of the next.

                        But if they say "80 columns" or "132 columns", they mean the number of monospaced character cells that fit across one line of text _within_ one of those columns.

                        If you need, for example, a command-line option for each of these, and you don't want to call either option '--columns' because that's ambiguous, what _do_ you call each one?

                        Particularly the first one (2 or 3 columns). I haven't come up with any good description for it that doesn't involve a definition by negatives. "Number of columns, no, not in that sense, the other sense."

                        R This user is from outside of this forum
                        R This user is from outside of this forum
                        rogandawes@infosec.exchange
                        wrote last edited by
                        #13

                        @simontatham I'd consider "pillar" vs "column", perhaps? Not exactly unambiguous, but claiming "pillar" for "arranged in 2 or 3 columns" doesn't seem entirely unreasonable.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • simontatham@hachyderm.ioS simontatham@hachyderm.io

                          Terminology: what are good unambiguous names for the two senses of the word "column", when printing text in a monospaced font?

                          If someone says "2 columns" or "3 columns", they mean it in the sense that a newspaper is laid out in multiple columns – you read to the bottom of the first column before starting from the top of the next.

                          But if they say "80 columns" or "132 columns", they mean the number of monospaced character cells that fit across one line of text _within_ one of those columns.

                          If you need, for example, a command-line option for each of these, and you don't want to call either option '--columns' because that's ambiguous, what _do_ you call each one?

                          Particularly the first one (2 or 3 columns). I haven't come up with any good description for it that doesn't involve a definition by negatives. "Number of columns, no, not in that sense, the other sense."

                          scmbradley@mathstodon.xyzS This user is from outside of this forum
                          scmbradley@mathstodon.xyzS This user is from outside of this forum
                          scmbradley@mathstodon.xyz
                          wrote last edited by
                          #14

                          @simontatham line width for the 80 column version?

                          simontatham@hachyderm.ioS 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • simontatham@hachyderm.ioS simontatham@hachyderm.io

                            Terminology: what are good unambiguous names for the two senses of the word "column", when printing text in a monospaced font?

                            If someone says "2 columns" or "3 columns", they mean it in the sense that a newspaper is laid out in multiple columns – you read to the bottom of the first column before starting from the top of the next.

                            But if they say "80 columns" or "132 columns", they mean the number of monospaced character cells that fit across one line of text _within_ one of those columns.

                            If you need, for example, a command-line option for each of these, and you don't want to call either option '--columns' because that's ambiguous, what _do_ you call each one?

                            Particularly the first one (2 or 3 columns). I haven't come up with any good description for it that doesn't involve a definition by negatives. "Number of columns, no, not in that sense, the other sense."

                            tipiak75@mastodon.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                            tipiak75@mastodon.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                            tipiak75@mastodon.social
                            wrote last edited by
                            #15

                            @simontatham newspaper-style layout block unit vs character-wide length unit. Best that comes to mind.

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                            • scmbradley@mathstodon.xyzS scmbradley@mathstodon.xyz

                              @simontatham line width for the 80 column version?

                              simontatham@hachyderm.ioS This user is from outside of this forum
                              simontatham@hachyderm.ioS This user is from outside of this forum
                              simontatham@hachyderm.io
                              wrote last edited by
                              #16

                              @Scmbradley that's the easier one. But the other one needs a rename too, because if you have --columns and --width, then a user who sees both options can figure out which is which, but if they only read as far as --columns in the first place, they can leap to the wrong conclusion about what it means.

                              _Both_ options want to have names that make it obvious that they're not the other one.

                              scmbradley@mathstodon.xyzS 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • thomastc@mastodon.gamedev.placeT thomastc@mastodon.gamedev.place

                                @simontatham An adjective like "typographical column" vs. "character column"? It's awkward but I can't think of anything better right now.

                                woe2you@beige.partyW This user is from outside of this forum
                                woe2you@beige.partyW This user is from outside of this forum
                                woe2you@beige.party
                                wrote last edited by
                                #17

                                @thomastc @simontatham I'd go with typographical column vs terminal column.

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                                • simontatham@hachyderm.ioS simontatham@hachyderm.io

                                  Terminology: what are good unambiguous names for the two senses of the word "column", when printing text in a monospaced font?

                                  If someone says "2 columns" or "3 columns", they mean it in the sense that a newspaper is laid out in multiple columns – you read to the bottom of the first column before starting from the top of the next.

                                  But if they say "80 columns" or "132 columns", they mean the number of monospaced character cells that fit across one line of text _within_ one of those columns.

                                  If you need, for example, a command-line option for each of these, and you don't want to call either option '--columns' because that's ambiguous, what _do_ you call each one?

                                  Particularly the first one (2 or 3 columns). I haven't come up with any good description for it that doesn't involve a definition by negatives. "Number of columns, no, not in that sense, the other sense."

                                  davebiff@mas.toD This user is from outside of this forum
                                  davebiff@mas.toD This user is from outside of this forum
                                  davebiff@mas.to
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #18

                                  @simontatham At the risk of excessive verbosity, --layout-columns and --text-width-columns?

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                                  • simontatham@hachyderm.ioS simontatham@hachyderm.io

                                    Terminology: what are good unambiguous names for the two senses of the word "column", when printing text in a monospaced font?

                                    If someone says "2 columns" or "3 columns", they mean it in the sense that a newspaper is laid out in multiple columns – you read to the bottom of the first column before starting from the top of the next.

                                    But if they say "80 columns" or "132 columns", they mean the number of monospaced character cells that fit across one line of text _within_ one of those columns.

                                    If you need, for example, a command-line option for each of these, and you don't want to call either option '--columns' because that's ambiguous, what _do_ you call each one?

                                    Particularly the first one (2 or 3 columns). I haven't come up with any good description for it that doesn't involve a definition by negatives. "Number of columns, no, not in that sense, the other sense."

                                    sil@mastodon.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
                                    sil@mastodon.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
                                    sil@mastodon.social
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #19

                                    @simontatham I reckon that "column" in the sense of "number of characters" is a fossil usage in phrases like "80-column text" (and for old computer people such as us, too :)); pretty much everything that involves _setting_ that number calls it "width" or similar (--width as an option).
                                    Newspaper-style columns I'd call --columns or --column-count; most people would, I think, not be confused by this and think that it's about character width. But since some might (you, for a start), --column-count.

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                                    • simontatham@hachyderm.ioS simontatham@hachyderm.io

                                      Terminology: what are good unambiguous names for the two senses of the word "column", when printing text in a monospaced font?

                                      If someone says "2 columns" or "3 columns", they mean it in the sense that a newspaper is laid out in multiple columns – you read to the bottom of the first column before starting from the top of the next.

                                      But if they say "80 columns" or "132 columns", they mean the number of monospaced character cells that fit across one line of text _within_ one of those columns.

                                      If you need, for example, a command-line option for each of these, and you don't want to call either option '--columns' because that's ambiguous, what _do_ you call each one?

                                      Particularly the first one (2 or 3 columns). I haven't come up with any good description for it that doesn't involve a definition by negatives. "Number of columns, no, not in that sense, the other sense."

                                      iliazeus@gts.iliazeus.lolI This user is from outside of this forum
                                      iliazeus@gts.iliazeus.lolI This user is from outside of this forum
                                      iliazeus@gts.iliazeus.lol
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #20

                                      @simontatham I'd probably use something like --width for character columns and --columns for newspaper-columns, but would also print a warning if their values seem too high (80 newspaper-columns) or too low (3 character-columns).

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                                      • simontatham@hachyderm.ioS simontatham@hachyderm.io

                                        Terminology: what are good unambiguous names for the two senses of the word "column", when printing text in a monospaced font?

                                        If someone says "2 columns" or "3 columns", they mean it in the sense that a newspaper is laid out in multiple columns – you read to the bottom of the first column before starting from the top of the next.

                                        But if they say "80 columns" or "132 columns", they mean the number of monospaced character cells that fit across one line of text _within_ one of those columns.

                                        If you need, for example, a command-line option for each of these, and you don't want to call either option '--columns' because that's ambiguous, what _do_ you call each one?

                                        Particularly the first one (2 or 3 columns). I haven't come up with any good description for it that doesn't involve a definition by negatives. "Number of columns, no, not in that sense, the other sense."

                                        cunobaros@mendeddrum.orgC This user is from outside of this forum
                                        cunobaros@mendeddrum.orgC This user is from outside of this forum
                                        cunobaros@mendeddrum.org
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #21

                                        @simontatham text columns vs character columns?

                                        simontatham@hachyderm.ioS 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • cunobaros@mendeddrum.orgC cunobaros@mendeddrum.org

                                          @simontatham text columns vs character columns?

                                          simontatham@hachyderm.ioS This user is from outside of this forum
                                          simontatham@hachyderm.ioS This user is from outside of this forum
                                          simontatham@hachyderm.io
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #22

                                          @cunobaros maybe, but I can still imagine "text columns" being ambiguous.

                                          Perhaps I should have been clearer in the original post (but I didn't want to make it too long): one situation I have in mind is that a user hasn't yet noticed that there _are_ two options, because they read the help as far as one of them and then stopped before seeing the other one.

                                          If a user is already thinking "I want 132-column text", and they see that the help offers them --text-columns, then that fits with the words already in their head and they're liable to say "aha, --text-columns=132" before looking further.

                                          There are lots of pairs of words that you can easily tell apart once you notice that both of them exist in the first place. But I want both options to have names unambiguous enough that even if you see one of them on its own, you can't mistake it for the other meaning.

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