Clem, It figures. I should have known there was a reason for the shorter lines other than display. Conventions are sticky and there appears to be a generation gap. I use single spaces between sentences, but my ancestors used 2... who knows why? :). Will On 11/6/20 9:07 AM, Clem Cole wrote: > Will, I do still the same thing, but the reason for 72 for email being > that way is still card-based.  In FORTRAN the first column defines if > the card is new (a blank), a comment (a capital C), no zero a > 'continuation' of the last card.  But column 73-80 were 'special' and > used to store sequence #s (this was handy when you dropped your card > deck, card sorters could put it back into canonical order).  So > characters in those columns were typically ignored.   Thus when "Model > 28 ASR" (a.k.a. ASR-28) created it had 72 columns. It's interesting > that when its follow on the Model 33 was created, it actually had 74, > but most SW configured it to 72 [search for a manual on bit savers or > the like if you want the details]. > > IIRC, the original DEC 'Glass TTY' - the VT-05 was 72, but later > terminals like the VT-52 were 80 columns, as was the ADM 3A. > > The one thing I will give the 'tyranny of 80-columns" is when I look > at code it starts to break that line size by a lot, I often think that > is a bell-weather of something that needs to be rewritten and > simplified, and/or the abstraction might not be right.   Like, > most/many rules there >>are<< often break exceptions, but when I do > look code with really long lines, I admit I am suspect. > > > Clem > > > On Fri, Nov 6, 2020 at 8:21 AM Will Senn > wrote: > > On 11/6/20 12:34 AM, Rob Pike wrote: > > > https://github.com/golang/go/commit/a625b919163e76c391f2865d1f956c0f16d90f83 > > > > > > > Hilarious. I use fixed font - Monaco 14. But, 80 columns? not on your > life. I hate wrapped text output, if I can avoid it. That said, I > set my > soft word wrap in the text editor at 72 :). My convention comes from > early email though, not punched cards. > > Will > > -- > GPG Fingerprint: 68F4 B3BD 1730 555A 4462  7D45 3EAA 5B6D A982 BAAF > -- GPG Fingerprint: 68F4 B3BD 1730 555A 4462 7D45 3EAA 5B6D A982 BAAF