@cfr I was thinking that probably many of your events aren't really 'lectures' in a classical sense - more seminars or workshops. For us, we tend to list most events as 'lectures' (auto-recorded) rather than 'workshops' (not recorded), but then be flexible in presentation
@cfr I would guess that someone at UEA doing similar teaching to you would put most events down as 'seminar' so they'd not be recorded as standard
@cfr For me, a 'workshop' is a whole cohort event where there are questions and we might have some discussion, but might just let the students work on things - ideally we'd have more than one member of staff, but that's a push nowadays
@cfr We also have tutorials - small group, still can be in staff offices, no question of recroding
@mickep i know for a fact that Springer is exactly the same. They contract typesetting, editing and QA out to a bunch of companies, at least for the more profitable journals and series.
@cfr Well they're definitely interpreted as the same as the object, but if you take "object" and "subject" to be structural positions, then they're not either of those things.
@cfr Sorry that's just a term of art that means "is syntactically represented but phonologically null, i.e., has no pronunciation".
@cfr in those languages, subjects aren't expressed as their own, phonologically distinct words but realizes as verb endings, like "amo", "i love" (lit. "love-i"). Syntactically, the subject's position is empty (i.e., null, or, depending on the theoretical framework, is a trace).
@Lupino @AlanMunn that was my guess, thanks. written welsh does that. biblical welsh does it even more. I just didn't know it was called that.
@JosephWright unfortunately, I don't have that power. we can choose what teaching techniques to use but we can't choose whether the sessions are 'lectures' (recorded) or 'seminars' (not).
@cfr Although most languages that do this have corresponding verbal morphology, it's not a requirement. E.g. Mandarin, Korean and Japanese have no verbal morphology corresponding to subject and object, but have null subjects and objects. Brazilian Portuguese has no object agreement morphology, but can have null objects.
@cfr But if you take the examples of the sort "Me I like that guy" and "That guy, I like him a lot", it's quite hard to say that the initial phrase is a subject or an object. I would say it's neither, but clearly related to a subject in the first sentence and to an object in the second sentence.
@cfr Context helps a lot. We're very good a following a conversation. And even English has null objects in recipes: Take 2 eggs. Beat well. Combine with the dry ingredients.
@cfr So for example, if I go to the fridge and say "Hey, what happened to the piece of pizza that was here?" In Portuguese or Mandarin it would be perfectly natural to just respond "I ate". In English this is impossible, even though the context is the same. So those languages arguably have a null pronoun whereas English has nothing.
@cfr Well there is that too - but I meant that for example in some parts of UEA a 20-credit module is always X lectures, Y seminars - but in science it's whatever the teaching team fancy provided it's not too many hours in total
@JosephWright I don't know about sciences. I've always been told the pattern. but I really meant something more specific about Cardiff. current plan is to axe theology, ancient history, modern languages and translation and music ... (at least).
@cfr the newish bit is an html coloured and linked view of RelaxNG schema, the schema themselves are the grammar used by the structure tree of latex generated tagged pdf
@DavidCarlisle oh those secret secrets which we only tell people in secret? We should trust the dodos to show us secrets, after all they managed to keep their existence secret for a few thousand years.
@Skillmon possibly. I believe it is actually a secret whether they are plotting secret plans in secret, so we should have a secret plan in case they are secretly plotting secret plans in secret.
@cfr I hope @PauloCereda doesn't see this or his mind might be overwhelmed by all the secret secrets we and the dodos might be or are plotting in secret
@Skillmon weird, but thanks. I do have the manual page. but ... hmm ... (actually my first interpretation was that it was a literal command, but then I thought that must be wrong.)
@Skillmon yes, I realise that much, but it doesn't do that. git for-each-ref --format='%(refname:short)' refs/remotes/tags doesn't return anything at all.
@JosephWright does anything speak against turning \ProcessList into \tl_map_tokens:nn instead of \tl_map_function:nN? Would simplify things like tex.stackexchange.com/questions/736281/…