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[MaRkEd-FoR-dElEtIoN] widely known to exist. A bit of googling perhaps. |
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If it were a filter helping me avoid ever having to observe this style of text, the bun would be forthcoming... |
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Where do people (try to) type like this? |
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A bad place you don't want to go. |
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It would be far more interesting to write with alternating
vowels and consonants. And probably impossible. |
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One could write a macro to do this, I think. One being not this one, though. |
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What I've always wanted is a macro to replace letters with basically indistinguishable, but differently coded, unicode glyphs, for example, replacing capital A with capital Greek alpha (Α), or lower case p with lower case Cyrillic r (р), or capital D with the Cherokee letter A (Ꭰ). |
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What jamobaker said. Alternating caps is a signal that the content of text is useless or uninteresting, so a filter to block it would be handy. |
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Well, obviously. But I was thinking, ynow, English. |
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Having braved the dark underbellies of the World Wide Web, I
assure you all that typing like this is a common practice in
more rustic corners of the internet. |
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Maybe one could just type the letter A differently or signify that it was different with some mark. I recall the explanation given to be by my music teacher as regards the difference between B sharp instead of C. |
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[LoriZ], those exist too. Can't find a link, but they're often used to try and hide the fact that work is plagiarised, so that searching for phrases just copied and pasted returns nothing in a search engine. |
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