I’m not overly bothered when someone writes
Its now the time for the good party and it’s donkeys to come to the aid of there country.
Most of my posts would look at least that bad if I didn’t proofread them. But these spelling errors are understandable — the fingers and cerebellum are blundering in concert while the cerebrum is daydreaming of the lost innocence of one’s salad days. But I am annoyed by deliberate errors.
Would you type a semi-colon where a comma is proper because it looks prettier? No. Type a ‘z’ instead of ‘x’ because you forget where the ‘x’ key is? No. Then don’t type a hyphen where a dash is called for! OK?
I became enamored with the dash via Edgar Allan Poe, who used it extensively and even made it the subject of a short easy with beginning and end quoted here:
[QUOTE=Edgar Allan Poe, in Marginalia]
That punctuation is important all agree; but how few comprehend the extent of its importance! The writer who neglects punctuation, or mis-punctuates, is liable to be misunderstood — this, according to the popular idea, is the sum of the evils arising from heedlessness or ignorance. It does not seem to be known that, even where the sense is perfectly clear, a sentence may be deprived of half its force — its spirit — its point — by improper punctuation. For the want of merely a comma, it often occurs that an axiom appears a paradox, or that a sarcasm is converted into a sermonoid.
…
Therefore, the dash cannot be dispensed with. It has its phases — its variation of the force described; but the one principle — that of second thought or emendation — will be found at the bottom of all.
[/QUOTE]
I’ll admit that I probably overuse the dash. Avoiding it altogether is an acceptable policy — certainly far better than substituting a hyphen where a dash is needed. If you do use a dash, here are the ways to type it, from best to worst:
[ul]li It has its phases — its variation of the force described.[/li][li](1, tied) It has its phases—its variation of the force described.[/li]li It has its phases – its variation of the force described.[/li]li It has its phases - its variation of the force described.[/li]li It has its phases-its variation of the force described.[/ul][/li]The dash can be created from the keyboard with Alt-151. Using a double hyphen for the dash, as in (3), is acceptable. IIRC, that’s the standard for text processors like Nroff, LaTeX and even MSWord. But do not use a single hyphen. Please. (I’ve left gaps in the ranking above — 3 to 10, and then to 35 — to emphasize the grating appearance of misused hyphens. I’d rather listen to a mistuned piano then have to look at such a thing.) If you insist on making errors when you type, use ‘their’ for ‘there’ or ‘wierd’ or ‘weird.’ Frankly, I’d almost rather you use no punctuation at all then misuse the hyphen!
@Mods — move this to the Pit, please, if that seems more appropriate (although I have avoided naming any particular Doper who refuses to type a dash). BTW, I mentioned my disdain for the misused hyphen before, and a copy-editor replied that he had no problem with it. Can anyone point to to the use of such a monstrosity in professional writing?