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Alan45
Village Elder
Joined: 25 Aug 2010
Posts: 10013
Location: Virginia
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Posted: Sat Oct 24, 2015 7:46 pm
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leafy sea dragon wrote:
Quote: | The only thing I don't understand is why they don't just go to a library |
Too much trouble. The book store is in or near the mall, they can hang out when not reading. Most of them would have to find the library, assuming they know what one is. Also the library probably would not let them sit on the floor.
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leafy sea dragon
Joined: 27 Oct 2009
Posts: 7163
Location: Another Kingdom
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Posted: Sat Oct 24, 2015 7:52 pm
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You got a point there. Libraries aren't social hangouts, and they're too lazy to even walk 25 feet to a chair.
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Mr. Oshawott
Joined: 12 Mar 2012
Posts: 6773
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Posted: Sat Oct 24, 2015 8:50 pm
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Alan45 wrote: | Too much trouble. The book store is in or near the mall, they can hang out when not reading. Most of them would have to find the library, assuming they know what one is. Also the library probably would not let them sit on the floor. |
In addition to that, many libraries might not even have any manga available for manga readers to enjoy.
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Sariachan
Joined: 09 May 2005
Posts: 1507
Location: Italy
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Posted: Wed Nov 04, 2015 7:44 pm
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Here in Italy, it took much less to read manga in their original form. All started from Star Comics, which published Dragon Ball for the first time in 1995, in its original right-to-left format.
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Shiroi Hane
Encyclopedia Editor
Joined: 25 Oct 2003
Posts: 7580
Location: Wales
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Posted: Fri Nov 06, 2015 2:40 pm
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leafy sea dragon wrote: | Yeah, I had a classmate in middle school who's Japanese and would read Japanese magazines. I noticed that the front cover was on the other side and asked her if that was a left-handed book, and she told me that it isn't and that traditional Japanese is read right-to-left. |
Worth mentioning that that only applied to vertical text, which is read first top-to-bottom and then right-to-left. Horizontal text is read left-to-right as in English. Japanese Novels are all written using vertical text.
This lead to the bizarre situation with Newtype USA which used the same right-to-left format as Newtype Japan, however the original used vertical text. So, in the USA version you read left-to-right across the right page then left-to-right across the left page and so on... which made no sense at all.
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leafy sea dragon
Joined: 27 Oct 2009
Posts: 7163
Location: Another Kingdom
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Posted: Fri Nov 06, 2015 2:46 pm
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Oh yeah, you're right. Maybe she did say top-to-bottom (but the columns would still be read right-to-left--maybe she meant that because I had asked about the reversed page order). I certainly remember it stood out to me because I really had no familiarity with Japanese books at that point but I had recently looked at the Klutz left-handed book, which also had an inverted page order, so I assumed she was reading a left-handed book.
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Polycell
Joined: 16 Jan 2012
Posts: 4623
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Posted: Mon Nov 09, 2015 8:07 pm
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Shiroi Hane wrote: | vertical text |
Random, not quite related thing your comment brought to mind: I've read a few of the older unflopped releases and their use of vertical text is atrocious. It took me far too long on those speech bubbles in Please Teacher since I I kept trying to read the columns right-to-left instead of the left-to-right they used(and just figuring that out took too long, like a car that refuses to start). Hideous as it is, I'm glad about the bludgeoning of horizontal text into those bubbles now.
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walw6pK4Alo
Joined: 12 Mar 2008
Posts: 9322
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Posted: Tue Nov 10, 2015 2:32 pm
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Horizontal text in vertical bubbles isn't an issue so long as the bubble is a nice round oval, and not super elongated. Sure you have to work a bit more to break up longer words, but typesetting really isn't difficult.
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