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