Welcome to CSR Nation
Anyone have biomedical patent terminology you wouldn't mind sharing? Seems like I make up briefs on the fly for each job. Ugh. :(Continue
Started by Quyen N. Do. Last reply by Ann Medis Apr 19.
These come in handy when writing long Bates numbers as well as product serial numbers. This is an invention of my own. I've shared it at seminars with Eclipse instructors, so you might have picked…Continue
Started by Dennis Zambataro. Last reply by Keith Rowan II Mar 26.
If anyone has any objection briefs to add, please do.I do "incomplete hypothetical" as HOIP."Calls for speculation" as KAUPZ"Calls for a legal conclusion" as KAULZ"Beyond the scope" as BOEP"Assumes…Continue
Started by Kelli Combs (admin). Last reply by Mya Temple Feb 1.
Add a Comment
Comment by Quyen N. Do on April 1, 2012 at 12:08 Oh, well, strike that. In my example below, your stroke for the space included in the decimal stroke would work better because it's one stroke, in which case you could define it as {^ ^}{DECIMAL}.
Comment by Quyen N. Do on April 1, 2012 at 11:51 Welcome. :)
It also knows, if there is a preceding number, that the preceding number should be numeric, so you don't get one.1.
But you will need a space stroke if, say, "Both players have two .315 batting averages," meaning .315 and .315.
My space stroke is SP*S, defined as {^ ^}, open curly bracket, carot, space, carot, close curly bracket.
Comment by Janet on April 1, 2012 at 11:40
Thanks! My definition is a bit more complicated than that.
Comment by Quyen N. Do on April 1, 2012 at 11:34 Janet, if you define it as {DECIMAL}, you don't have to have a different stroke for putting in the space before "His batting average is .315," for example. Eclipse knows to put in the space if there is no preceding number.
Comment by Janet on April 1, 2012 at 11:29
I don't have conflicts so I haven't used the artificial intelligence in years. Back when I did, I did get things like one.3. That's why I globalled them like I did. I'm sure it's come a long way since then.
Comment by Christy Fagan on April 1, 2012 at 9:16 POIRN. Haha! Sorry. That was funny.
Comment by Kathy Langstaff on April 1, 2012 at 9:06 I use POIN for the decimal and POIRN for space decimal.
Comment by Quyen N. Do on April 1, 2012 at 9:05 Wynne -- love your name, my name is pronounced similarly. ;)
I'm still on E4, but I write point as POINT, and the decimal as final -P, defined as {DECIMAL}. Never failed me . . . and no asterisk. :)
I don't know if that has changed in 5, if that's what you're using. I can't imagine Jeremy would have changed it, though.
Comment by Naola "Sam" Vaughn on April 1, 2012 at 9:00 Actually, in Eclipse, you don't have to have two strokes for 1.3 or .3. The software knows to put them together, and you shouldn't end up with one.3 ever. I think if I have a stroke for a decimal point, it should apply to all decimal points.
I use P-T for decimal point.
Kelli Combs (admin) replied to Kelli Combs (admin)'s discussion Heels.com - Have you seen these shoes??
Stacy Hetrick replied to Stacy Hetrick's discussion I am looking for work as a notereader or scopist. in the group Scopists© 2012 Created by Kelli Combs (admin).
You need to be a member of Brief Group to add comments!