Poll: Blogs, Entries, Posts, Comments, or Replies
Monday, December 24th, 2018 06:46 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
When I prepare to publish something here, I think "I'm writing a post." When my gentle readers respond to what I've written, I think "they're making comments." Yet the official Dreamwidth vocabulary is not so straightforward. These are the things that keep me up at night!
To publish the current item, I tapped the "Post" link on the navigation bar. The next screen is called "Create Entries," yet the final action button is called "Post a $securitylevel Entry." With each entry I control who responds with "Comment" settings, yet the relevant FAQ talks about "replies."
One of Dreamwidth's quirkier features is how you can customize much of the user interaction texts
https://www.dreamwidth.org/customize/options?group=text
My favorite example is sovay, who titles the Comment/Reply function "Performable Epic."
When you visit this platform, what are you reading?
A blog
6 (14.0%)
A journal
22 (51.2%)
A Dreamwidth
6 (14.0%)
A diary
1 (2.3%)
@jesse_the_k's stuff
2 (4.7%)
Will explain in comments
6 (14.0%)
The basic unit of communication on Dreamwidth is
a post
32 (72.7%)
an entry
11 (25.0%)
a squee
0 (0.0%)
a topic
0 (0.0%)
a moan
0 (0.0%)
Will explain in comments
1 (2.3%)
When you're moved to respond after you're done reading whatever the previous item is called, are you making a
comment
42 (97.7%)
reply
0 (0.0%)
response
0 (0.0%)
big deal about nothing
0 (0.0%)
Will explain in comments
1 (2.3%)
How does this poll strike you?
(no subject)
Date: 2018-12-25 02:39 am (UTC)Yay!
I am glad you approve.
I'd love to collect
Date: 2018-12-26 09:36 pm (UTC)How did you come to chose "performable epic"? Is it frozen language from rhetoric?
Just now, your post from 2010 shows as the second Google result
https://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q="performable%20epic"
Re: I'd love to collect
Date: 2018-12-27 12:55 am (UTC)It is probably because I got my livejournal while I was at grad school for Classics and I was brought up in the Milman Parry/Albert Lord school of Homeric epic as oral tradition, not composed text, and I talked and thought a lot about epic in performance, not on the page.