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Subject:Re: What is More Important? From:"Kathleen MacDowell" <kathleen -at- writefortheuser -dot- com> To:"Janice Gelb" <Janice -dot- Gelb -at- sun -dot- com> Date:Tue, 15 May 2007 22:27:33 -0500
don't think it's quite so easy to split technically accurate away from
mediocre writing. There's no doubt that the accuracy is necessary. But a
misplaced comma can provide erroneous instructions, just as using the wrong
article could. But, if the product isn't hazardous in some way,
poor instructions (accuracy- or writing-wise) are primarily frustrating.
I suspect that many of you are unconsciously thinking of content that the
reader has a background in, if you think that poor punctuation, etc. is less
important than technical accuracy.
If I have a background and something is puzzling or doesn't quite work
(because of the effects of punctuation, etc. errors), I might be able to
work the problem out. If I'm a beginner, I wouldn't have a clue where the
problem was.
On 5/15/07, Janice Gelb <Janice -dot- Gelb -at- sun -dot- com> wrote:
>
> Gene Kim-Eng wrote:
> > I suspect that the standards most people on this list would require to
> > call something "well written" are considerably higher than what the
> > average user (and even some above-average users) would. So
> > "well written" as it applies to style of grammar, spelling, punctuation,
> > style, etc., is a fairly rubber standard. On the technical side, there
> is
> > usually not so much flexibility. Wrong is just wrong. You will most
> > likely not get very many user complaints if there are a few spelling
> > or punctuation errors, but if you give someone an instruction that
> > causes something to crash or explode when it isn't supposed to,
> > you can probably count on something nasty hitting a fan somewhere.
> >
>
> Then there's somewhere in between: what about
> a missing explanation that would cause users not
> to make a common mistake while using the product
> in a certain way? Leaving it out doesn't make
> the documentation technically inaccurate but
> it could cause the reader to use the product
> incorrectly. Or explanations that are worded
> so ambiguously or in such a convoluted way that
> they don't convey the information in a usable
> way even if they're technically accurate?
>
> -- Janice
>
>
> --
> Kathleen MacDowell
> www.writefortheuser.com
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