I will repeat this as many times as I need to: no matter how terrible you think your writing is, I would far rather read it than anything that came out of an LLM.

@amin Reading articles written by AI can be interesting — spotting AI articles can be fun for some people.
It's not just that they sound robotic or remove all personal associations, there's lots of other ways to tell such as:

  • use of em-dashes (often overuse of them)
  • use of "It's not just", "not only" sentence structures
  • lists of three

(This post was written by a human, in an attempt at satire in the tone of AI)

P.S. I agree. I'd always prefer to read an article full of poor spelling and grammar than a dull and robotic supposed fact dump

@amin i recently pointed out to one of my clients that an article they had "written" and put in their newsletter was clearly written by AI

It contained 14 em-dashes. Don't get me wrong, em-dashes have a purpose, but when they said "no I typed them" I responded, "OK, type me an em-dash now on your keyboard"
Long story short, they couldn't.

@paul @amin Is there a semantic purpose to an em-dash, as opposed to other kinds of dashes? I never use any myself.

@thedoctor my understanding is it can be used similar to how we sometimes use a comma today to put a sort of footnote in the middle of a sentence.

@amin made a great example when pointing out I used an em-dash in my first post

It was used a lot in history, just not so much these days. If AI is good for one thing though, it's for bringing the em-dash back

@paul @amin And other dashes are used for different purposes?

@thedoctor @paul

Yep. Hyphens (-) and en dashes (–) are used specifically to connect words into a compound word. "His light-headed friend" for example, combines "light" and "headed" into one compound adjective to describe friend (I recently learned this isn't necessary if the compound adjective is the object: "His friend is light headed").

An en dash would be either used to connect ranges of numbers/dates ("1990–1991", "Jan–Feb") or in cases where one half of the compound word is itself two words (I'm often in this situation but I'm having trouble thinking of an example), but in both cases people usually just use a hyphen instead and no one cares.

This article does a great job explaining it all with examples: https://www.merriam-webster.com/grammar/em-dash-en-dash-how-to-use

How to Use Em Dashes (—), En Dashes (–) , and Hyphens (-)

Be dashing—and do it well

@amin @paul Yes I just use hyphens for all this.

@thedoctor @paul

Perfectly fine. Don't use hyphens for em dashes, though. ;)

Two hyphens is the minimum I will accept in the place of an em dash—at least that's common enough due to people not knowing how to type the real thing. One hyphen is just completely wrong. XD

@amin @paul I'm not sure myself. I'll try out if Hugo markdown includes facilities for this.

@thedoctor @paul

Huh, it might.

I usually use Linux's compose key (compose+ hyphen hyphen hyphen) or Colemak's internationalization layer (rightalt+shift+hyphen) to type it. On Windows it was rightalt+(0 1 5 1) [the numbers in parentheses are typed in sequence on a numpad or possibly the top row).

@amin @thedoctor @paul

mine makes ± with that combo – seems to be AltGr n for me and — is altGr i :)