Same here, at least posts can be edited, much worse when you do it in emails.Worse, for some reason some I only spot some after I've posted, regardless of checking the original first. <sigh!>![]()
PEBCAK Error. Problem exists between chair and keyboard.
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Same here, at least posts can be edited, much worse when you do it in emails.Worse, for some reason some I only spot some after I've posted, regardless of checking the original first. <sigh!>![]()
Yes, you can make exceptions by URL with that particular extension by right-clicking it and choosing options to make it inoperative. You can also choose to temporarily just turn it completely off as well. No harm, no foul.I now understood, that it's something I did in ublock. Can I switch off ublock just for this website?
It is an odd effect indeed. I've tried really hard to scan for all mistakes before submitting a post, with this in mind at the time and so on the alert, and yet despite the font being so close or identical between edit and posted I still often miss something that immediately stands out after posting. I remember noticing a similar effect when I first started programming, and I'd spot syntax errors immediately from a printout after spending ages trying to find them on the screen. I think there's some sort of shift in context that gets the brain to properly re-evaluate the text and then it see's the breaks in the patterns - ha! that's funny! I'm clearing the cache!Same here, at least posts can be edited, much worse when you do it in emails.
PEBCAK Error. Problem exists between chair and keyboard.
I was trained to proof read as part of my trade, and I was good at it, yet I do exactly the same.I've tried really hard to scan for all mistakes before submitting a post, with this in mind at the time and so on the alert, and yet despite the font being so close or identical between edit and posted I still often miss something that immediately stands out after posting.
Interesting, I read with great precision and accuracy, but ...I was trained to proof read as part of my trade, and I was good at it, yet I do exactly the same.
Yes, that's how it seems to work. Other people's errors stand out glaringly to me but my brain seems to skip past my own.@Outdated - you, I believe, are quite visual in your cognition? I just wonder if you notice a similar effect in the difference proofing something you've written as opposed to proof reading other people's work?
It sounds like although the mechanisms may differ, the underlying methods are rather similar.Yes, that's how it seems to work. Other people's errors stand out glaringly to me but my brain seems to skip past my own.