gainer
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- Joined
- Sep 20, 2002
- Messages
- 3,699
Patrick, I'm sure you've heard of "compensating devs"; keeping the highlights from blocking up too much and also letting in some light to the shadows. Well, a "semi-compensating dev" allows this to happen to a lesser degree.
No, there is no scientific definition, AFAIK, and I don't think I could tell which was which. I think amount of "semi" depends on how much you dilute the dev. It might be one of those definitions that falls into the same catagory as "a little bit pregnant"![]()
Of course, I have heard of them, but usually it is because someone is trying to predict the behavior of a developer by looking at the composition who in fact has not used the developer. No one has, to my knowledge, even defined compensating satisfactorilly. I saw a diagram on the information that came with Acutol (IIRC) that showed a characteristic curve that was convex upward like an inverse exponential function that you see on gamma vs time of development curves. This was NOT an experimental curve but someone's theory. I wouldn't want such a curve even if it were real. It would not match any available paper curve.
"Semi" literally means "half" does it not? I'm reminded of the jokes we used to make about the Semi latus rectum in high school. Maybe we should call them "Semi rectum developers".