tContinuation Twitterformat Proposal
Alert your followers that a tweet will continue or is a continuation of your previous tweet.
/cont … ...
The tContinuation Twitterformat (e.g., /cont This is a continuation of the previous tweet.) makes it clear that either the current tweet will be continued in the next tweet ("to be continued", if used at the end of a tweet) or that the current tweet is a continuation of the previous tweet ("continued", if used at the start of a tweet). Twitter clients that implement tContinuation can display a message on tweets that are "to be continued" to alert users that there is more to come and "continued" tweets may be combined to display as a single tweet. The tContinuation Twitterformat has two shorthand forms (the semantically-and-typographically-correct horizontal ellipsis character; U+2026, and the misused-yet-ubiquitous three dots, ...).
Although Twitter is limited to 140 characters (and this a Good Thing™), there are times you want to explore a trail of thought or when you simply don't have the time to compress a thought into a single tweet (perhaps when the timeliness trumps brevity). Whatever the reason, it is a common occurrence to see two or three tweets in succession that would have been a single tweet had Twitter not had a 140 character limit. It would be semantically correct to display these tweets as a single tweet in the timeline. (In terms of attention, also, it means that a user can choose to ignore a tweet if it doesn't interest them without having to make the same decision on the next two tweets also.)
The tContinuation Twitterformat is special in that it has two shorthand forms. We already have a symbol in traditional language to denote continuation (the ellipsis character) and it may be used interchangeably with the tContinuation command. Additionally, since in common usage three dots (...) are used in place of the actual ellipsis character, the tContinutation Twitterformat defines that as a synonym also.
The tContinuation Twitterformat is also special in that its meaning differs depending on its location within a tweet (it may appear either at the beginning or at end of a tweet). When the tContinuation command appears at the start of a tweet, it means that the current tweet continues on from the previous one. When it appears at the end, it signals that the current tweet is not complete and will be continued in the next tweet.
The tContinuation Twitterformat is simple enough to be used manually by users. e.g.,
This tweet will continue in the next one /cont
and
/cont This tweet is a continuation of the previous tweet
The above two tweets are synonymous with the following shorthand forms:
…This tweet is a continuation of the previous tweet
and
This tweet will continue in the next one...
1. Full support:
When a tweet is received, check for the tContinuation markers (/cont, and the shorthands – ellipsis, and three dots) at the very beginning and the very end of the tweet.
This Twitterformat Proposal is released under a Creative Commons Attribution License.
The tContinuation Twitterformat Proposal article by Aral Balkan, unless otherwise expressly stated, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 2.0 UK: England License.Alert your followers that a tweet will continue or is a continuation of your previous tweet.
Using three dots instead of the ellipsis characters is the right choice from the typographical point of view. A good typesetter would never use the ellipsis character and most publishers use “period, nbsp, period, nbsp, period”