Opponents include: AxelBoldt (strongly). ("Short sentences", "Seven items"?? Are we writing a powerpoint presentation?) JHK (what Axel said), 24 (strongly - the topic is as complex as it is, period. That said, likely you are putting too much in one article if you find you have just long laundry lists, which probably should only apply to names...also multiple layers or subheadings helps), LDC (The study that came out with the "7 +/- 3" statistic was fatally flawed, and it's basically nonsense. Einstein said it best: "Things should be as simple as possible, but no simpler.")
On the fence include: Tarquin. Lists are good when there's a clear need for one. Short sentences are not necessarily good, nor do they guarantee readability. Writing well and clearly is more than following a list of rules -- otherwise we'd all be able to do it. Vicki Rosenzweig: Several short, choppy sentences aren't better than one longer one. Commas and clauses are a fine part of the English language. Most sentences benefit from verbs. Also, longer sentences can be better if they use familiar words and offer connections to things the reader already knows. Vicki Rosenzweig
Sounds like dumbing down to me. Do we have to comply with USA educational standards (sorry Portland).jimfbleak 14:22 Mar 10, 2003 (UTC)
Tarquin's recent change (reversion) on this page actually reintroduced misinformation that I tried to remove. Human short term memory capacity is not 7 +/- 3. Indeed, the title of George Miller's (1956) paper reads, in part, "The magical number seven, plus or minus two".
Nor does Miller's magic number have anything to do with effective sentence length or list length in an encyclopedia. Our readers aren't trying to memorize the words that make up the sentences. They aren't trying to hold the list items in short term memory. And even if they were, shorter sentences don't equate to fewer items to process. Because of "chunking", a 40 word sentence may still have only seven "memory items".
Why all this pseudo-psychologizing in an article entitled Use short sentences and lists? And keep in mind, I'm a fan of the article's advice. It makes bad writers better writers. And it makes good writers pay attention. But George Miller got squat to do with it.
And why, in an article that advises the use of short sentences do we find:
Doesn't that really mean "Long lists, passages, and sentences are hard to read"? And wouldn't it be sufficient to say, "especially on a computer"?
The article Use short sentences and lists, as it now stands, is effective testimony that the advice is needed. This is a clumsy article in many ways.
My, now entirely erased, revision described the rule Use short sentences and lists in a simple manner. Now we're back to an article full of misinformed talk about information processing and awkward prose.
Arthur 20:21 Mar 10, 2003 (UTC)
Isn't it funny that I, a proponent of the rule, feel that the rule has been overextended now in this article? Fewer words is not always better. Telling words are important. Oh, maybe I'll go back and lengthen a few sentences here later. Arthur 23:27 Mar 11, 2003 (UTC)
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