vault backup: 2026-03-24 10:13:10
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---
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id: 2026-03-24T09:51:24-04:00
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aliases: []
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title: 2026-03-24 09:51:24
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tags:
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- authorship/original
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- destiny/permanent
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- status/draft
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- type/periodic/timestamped
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dg-publish: true
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date-created: 2026-03-24T09:51:24-04:00
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daily: "[[2026-03-24]]"
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weekly: "[[2026-W13]]"
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monthly: "[[2026-03]]"
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quarterly: "[[2026-Q1]]"
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yearly: "[[2026]]"
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---
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# 2026-03-24 09:51:24
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A peer referred to column lines as matchlines,
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which I felt was incorrect
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based on how I've seen it heard it used,
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but I was curious of the etymology.
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CAD topics dominate search results for the term,
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but I found this one for clothes-making
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which appears to be older (1800's)
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and may be the origin of its use in drafting.
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> **match-line**
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>
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> a line drawn on a pattern
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> denoting where the textile pattern must be aligned
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> to ensure it is visually continuous across seam lines.
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I have to note that modern use of this meaning is exceedingly rare.
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So rare that I'm suspicious that LLM hallucination is afoot,
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but I can't research further now.
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