The point was that text fragments, link fragments and even “search for the phrase X” are things that are brittle and require software support that’s not necessarily a given. Having to enable experimental features of adding extensions are far too much hassle for the average user.
I honestly don’t see what “baggage” paginated formats have. If you don’t like pagination, turn it off in your PDF viewer. That’s much easier to do than to get all software in your tool chain to work correctly with text fragments.
Not a bug of text fragments.
This is a pretty foolish statement. It’s totally immaterial “who” is at fault if the feature doesn’t work. You did not manage to send a working text fragment over Lemmy. Doesn’t matter what in the chain screwed up.
I can tell you the page to turn to via a phone call or even in person. Try sending a text fragment by telling it to someone. Text fragments are a nice little feature but far too technical to adequately replace pagination in all circumstances.
How often are you in the scenario that you you’re on a phone call and need to tell someone where something is in a document versus communicating with them online where you can send a link though? Every work meeting I’ve been in for the past nearly a decade now has been through something like Teams, Slack, Zoom, etc. where I can send text.
Also PDF viewers are the baggage in the scenario. Everyone uses web browsers everyday. PDF viewers are the odd one out in the majority of people’s “tool chains”.
Which browser do you use that doesn’t have an integrated PDF viewer?
PDF is just another file format, and compared to websites it’s a really light format without active scripting. No tracking, no intrusive ads, no malware, no fishing, just a plain format that displays content and does nothing else.
Web browsers are baggage in that scenario.
And yes, I do talk to people. We do do in-person meetings.
And it’s a little weird that you have to downvote every post just because you can’t stand that people might have other opinions than you.
No, I took the bug as an example to show why the feature is a nice addition but not a replacement of older, easier and more resilient forms of sharing a location in a document.
You apparently can’t handle talking to someone who has a different opinion, and now I am going to be condescending, because that’s a sign of a very brittle personality.
Or to put it differently: When was the last time you sent a HTML file over eMail or some other way except sending the URL to a website?
Also, to use text fragment links you need to have the page hosted on a webserver. Can’t send links to local files since you don’t know the full path it will end up under on the local file system.
So if you just want to send a file and a reference to which part of the file you are talking about, you now need to either host the file on a webserver or have the recipient rewrite the link to include the path where they ended up putting the HTML file. Talk about baggage here.
The point was that text fragments, link fragments and even “search for the phrase X” are things that are brittle and require software support that’s not necessarily a given. Having to enable experimental features of adding extensions are far too much hassle for the average user.
I honestly don’t see what “baggage” paginated formats have. If you don’t like pagination, turn it off in your PDF viewer. That’s much easier to do than to get all software in your tool chain to work correctly with text fragments.
This is a pretty foolish statement. It’s totally immaterial “who” is at fault if the feature doesn’t work. You did not manage to send a working text fragment over Lemmy. Doesn’t matter what in the chain screwed up.
I can tell you the page to turn to via a phone call or even in person. Try sending a text fragment by telling it to someone. Text fragments are a nice little feature but far too technical to adequately replace pagination in all circumstances.
How often are you in the scenario that you you’re on a phone call and need to tell someone where something is in a document versus communicating with them online where you can send a link though? Every work meeting I’ve been in for the past nearly a decade now has been through something like Teams, Slack, Zoom, etc. where I can send text.
Also PDF viewers are the baggage in the scenario. Everyone uses web browsers everyday. PDF viewers are the odd one out in the majority of people’s “tool chains”.
Which browser do you use that doesn’t have an integrated PDF viewer?
PDF is just another file format, and compared to websites it’s a really light format without active scripting. No tracking, no intrusive ads, no malware, no fishing, just a plain format that displays content and does nothing else.
Web browsers are baggage in that scenario.
And yes, I do talk to people. We do do in-person meetings.
And it’s a little weird that you have to downvote every post just because you can’t stand that people might have other opinions than you.
Because I just wanted to show you a cool feature and due to a bug totally out of my control you use that as a chance to be condescending.
No, I took the bug as an example to show why the feature is a nice addition but not a replacement of older, easier and more resilient forms of sharing a location in a document.
You apparently can’t handle talking to someone who has a different opinion, and now I am going to be condescending, because that’s a sign of a very brittle personality.
Blocked. Enjoy feeling like you won. Life is too short to accept that behavior.
As I said.
When did this become about websites? I was always suggesting HTML files over PDF files.
What is another name for HTML files?
Or to put it differently: When was the last time you sent a HTML file over eMail or some other way except sending the URL to a website?
Also, to use text fragment links you need to have the page hosted on a webserver. Can’t send links to local files since you don’t know the full path it will end up under on the local file system.
So if you just want to send a file and a reference to which part of the file you are talking about, you now need to either host the file on a webserver or have the recipient rewrite the link to include the path where they ended up putting the HTML file. Talk about baggage here.