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Emailing to two email addresses
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07/02/2018 15:04:47
 
 
Information générale
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
01657796
Message ID:
01657972
Vues:
50
>>>>>>>>You are right. Separated by Comma it works. Thank you.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>Tax time soon... I wonder How much Punctuation will Be taxed for capital Gains.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>Take politics to Chatter4u.
>>>>>
>>>>>This is not politics, it's a matter Of english language confusing The case Of letters with capital, or by other means.
>>>>
>>>>I am sorry but I it is not my fault. I really tried very hard to avoid this, but the weird spellcheck on this Computer capitalizes words at random. Until now I have not found out, in which case it would do the capitalization, and why it is sometimes the case and at other times not. I have also looked at my bookcase to see if I find a documentation about similar cases. But to no avail. So I will put this case to rest for now.
>>>
>>>The whole issue of capitalization in english looks like a heisenbug. No rhyme or reason, no visible cause, no discernible rule, not even reproducible. Can't fix. Your spellchecker is under the same spell, I'm not surprised.
>>
>>Actually, capitalization in English is fairly straightforward. The first word in a sentence and names (whether personal or business) are capitalized. Nothing else is.
>>
>>My impression is that in some other languages (German?), it's more complex.
>>
>>Tamar
>
>I think another case for capitalizing a word is if it is part of a name. I forgot the exact term for this. For example:
>"My office is in this building"
>"My office is in the East Building"
>That is, when the building is part of the name, it is capitalized.

Yes, all names are capitalized.

Tamar
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