• The use of the passive voice

    From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to All on Tue Apr 27 06:14:00 2021
    I wrote a technical document and upon proofreading it, realized that the use of the passive voice by me could be considered by some to be excessive.

    I'm not sure what I was thinking, but when I corrected the voice I cut the document size in half.


    ... Assume the relaxation length of photons in the atmosphere is constant
    --- MultiMail/DOS v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From Arelor@21:2/138 to poindexter FORTRAN on Thu Apr 29 15:25:31 2021
    Re: The use of the passive voice
    By: poindexter FORTRAN to All on Tue Apr 27 2021 07:14 am

    I wrote a technical document and upon proofreading it, realized that the use of the passive voice by me could be considered by some to be excessive.

    I'm not sure what I was thinking, but when I corrected the voice I cut the document size in half.


    ... Assume the relaxation length of photons in the atmosphere is constant

    It is funny you bring the subject up. When I was taking English lessons, they told us passive voice sounded more formal and cooler. Then I started mixing myself with authors and realized passive was frowned upon.

    --
    gopher://gopher.richardfalken.com/1/richardfalken
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Linux
    * Origin: Palantir * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL * (21:2/138)
  • From Avon@21:1/101 to poindexter FORTRAN on Sat May 1 13:43:00 2021
    On 27 Apr 2021 at 07:14a, poindexter FORTRAN pondered and said...

    I wrote a technical document and upon proofreading it, realized that the use of the passive voice by me could be considered by some to be excessive.

    I'm not sure what I was thinking, but when I corrected the voice I cut
    the document size in half.

    wow. Can you give me an example so I understand this better? I'm interested
    in how best to do this sort of thing too.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A46 2020/08/26 (Windows/32)
    * Origin: Agency BBS | Dunedin, New Zealand | agency.bbs.nz (21:1/101)
  • From Adept@21:2/108 to poindexter FORTRAN on Fri Apr 30 04:31:13 2021
    I wrote a technical document and upon proofreading it, realized that the use of the passive voice by me could be considered by some to be excessive.

    I remember having an engineering friend who was quite certain that a certain type of technical document _should_ be written in the passive voice.

    I don't mean that in the, "they think that people should use the Oxford
    comma, as it is the only true and proper way" sense (though that one is
    true); I mean it in the, "there's a style guide somewhere that says this is
    how one should write an engineering paper".

    So I tend to wonder about that.

    But if you're reducing paper size in half while at least keeping the readability at the same level, undoubtedly it's better by _some_ scale.

    But maybe it's like ending a sentence in a preposition, which is something to avoid in Latin, and a rule that was never really a rule in English.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A46 2020/08/26 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Storm BBS (21:2/108)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to All on Tue Apr 27 07:14:00 2021
    I wrote a technical document and upon proofreading it, realized that the use of the passive voice by me could be considered by some to be excessive.

    I'm not sure what I was thinking, but when I corrected the voice I cut the document size in half.


    ... Assume the relaxation length of photons in the atmosphere is constant
    --- MultiMail/DOS v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From Arelor@21:2/138 to poindexter FORTRAN on Thu Apr 29 16:25:30 2021
    Re: The use of the passive voice
    By: poindexter FORTRAN to All on Tue Apr 27 2021 07:14 am

    I wrote a technical document and upon proofreading it, realized that the use of the passive voice by me could be considered by some to be excessive.

    I'm not sure what I was thinking, but when I corrected the voice I cut the document size in half.


    ... Assume the relaxation length of photons in the atmosphere is constant

    It is funny you bring the subject up. When I was taking English lessons, they told us passive voice sounded more formal and cooler. Then I started mixing myself with authors and realized passive was frowned upon.

    --
    gopher://gopher.richardfalken.com/1/richardfalken
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Linux
    * Origin: Palantir * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL * (21:2/138)
  • From Avon@21:1/101 to poindexter FORTRAN on Sat May 1 14:43:00 2021
    On 27 Apr 2021 at 07:14a, poindexter FORTRAN pondered and said...

    I wrote a technical document and upon proofreading it, realized that the use of the passive voice by me could be considered by some to be excessive.

    I'm not sure what I was thinking, but when I corrected the voice I cut
    the document size in half.

    wow. Can you give me an example so I understand this better? I'm interested
    in how best to do this sort of thing too.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A46 2020/08/26 (Windows/32)
    * Origin: Agency BBS | Dunedin, New Zealand | agency.bbs.nz (21:1/101)
  • From Adept@21:2/108 to poindexter FORTRAN on Fri Apr 30 05:31:12 2021
    I wrote a technical document and upon proofreading it, realized that the use of the passive voice by me could be considered by some to be excessive.

    I remember having an engineering friend who was quite certain that a certain type of technical document _should_ be written in the passive voice.

    I don't mean that in the, "they think that people should use the Oxford
    comma, as it is the only true and proper way" sense (though that one is
    true); I mean it in the, "there's a style guide somewhere that says this is
    how one should write an engineering paper".

    So I tend to wonder about that.

    But if you're reducing paper size in half while at least keeping the readability at the same level, undoubtedly it's better by _some_ scale.

    But maybe it's like ending a sentence in a preposition, which is something to avoid in Latin, and a rule that was never really a rule in English.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A46 2020/08/26 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Storm BBS (21:2/108)