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> Insisting on good spelling and grammar is not about being annoying, it's about not accidentally writing the opposite of what you want to convey :(

True, but in this case, you were able to infer the intended meaning from context, which is what reading is: interpreting text, which involves assigning meanings to symbols and resolving ambiguities to render the whole as intelligible as possible. Since nothing can be drawn out of the text per se, this means you are the one bringing all the meaning to the text. Whatever the author is conveying is, in one way or another, latent in the context that's already in your mind. Even fiction is composed of elements already in your mind.

(Which is why a lack of experience can be an obstacle to effective reading.)




> True, but in this case, you were able to infer the intended meaning from context, which is what reading is: interpreting text, which involves assigning meanings to symbols and resolving ambiguities to render the whole as intelligible as possible.

Yes, but each ambiguity in a given piece of text makes it harder to infer the intended meaning, in a way that's not linear with the number of ambiguities (or at least doesn't feel so). A missed comma here, an extra comma there, couple typos, and suddenly the text switches from understandable, if slightly tiresome to read, to entirely unintelligible sequence of glyphs that requires approaching it as a puzzle to have a chance at understanding what it says. The threshold for this switch is different for everyone, so it's in everyone's interest to keep your grammar and spelling correct.




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