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Far From Being a Utilitarian Afterthought, an Astonishing Number of Design Choices Go Into Pagination (theoutline.com)

An anonymous reader shares a report: In his landmark 1931 book An Essay on Typography, the British typographer Eric Gill discusses everything from the proper place for the tail of an 'R' to terminate to which type of word press might best serve the amateur typographer. He casts the printed word as sacred. But there's one thing -- a silent, steady workhorse found in nearly every book -- that Gill fails to address: the lowly page number. The functional role of the page number is simple: it provides order and sequence to a text. And while it is a supremely utilitarian design element, more thought is put into it than you might imagine. Should it go at the top or the bottom of the page? In the right or left margin? Or in the center? These are all conscious and deliberate choices made by designers.

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  1. Re:Slow news day? by Nidi62 · · Score: -1, Redundant

    ^^^ This. How about a lively discussion about how we can use tech to stop people from running over crowds of other people with speeding vehicles instead?

    You fucking islamaphobe, you need to be more accepting of other cultures.

    ^^^ This. How about a lively discussion about how we can use tech to stop people from running over crowds of other people with speeding vehicles instead?

    You fucking islamaphobe, you need to be more accepting of other cultures.

    Nice troll attempt, but I believe in the latest incident right before he committed the act, the perpetrator shouted out to an MRA guy that killed people a couple years ago.

    --
    The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil