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TK, or the secret to effortless writing (2024)

29 pointsby Tomtetoday at 3:58 PM15 commentsview on HN

Comments

rsingeltoday at 6:07 PM

Indeed a great trick. I often double it to TKTK just to make it stand out even more.

Fun fact: the Ghost.org editor looks for TK

https://ghost.org/changelog/tk-reminders/

pratikdeogharetoday at 6:12 PM

If you use Brashtag notation you could insert #tk{} bag.

https://github.com/pratikdeoghare/brashtag

natbennetttoday at 5:06 PM

I do this a lot but I use “TK:” with the colon to make it unambiguously grep-able (stands out better visually too)

cauchtoday at 4:58 PM

I've a very dim memory of having heard about it years ago (more than a decades), from an article of Cory Doctorow, and in my mind, he was the one who came up with the idea (and chose the letters TK).

But I can be wrong (maybe it's not from Doctorow, maybe the article did not even claim the paternity of coming up with TK but it was me badly understanding it, ...)

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karmakazetoday at 5:21 PM

LLMs should use "TK" or stable diffusion (and the like) so as not to get hung up on sequential words/thoughts and fill them in later instead of hallucinating filler.

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aleksiy123today at 5:10 PM

GCP employees heart rate spiking at the title.

sublineartoday at 5:14 PM

Could you instead use any two numerical digits? Then you've got a tagging system with up to 100 tags.

This assumes you're writing according to guidelines that insist you spell out all numbers. i.e. 58 is always intentionally "fifty-eight", so "58" must be your own meta text.

x______________today at 4:48 PM

tl;dr

add tk when you hit a wall (abbreviated from 'to come', yet spelled with k as tc appears in many words)

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