blackshoe, on 2012-March-09, 14:22, said:
What do people think about this practice of interrupting explanations?
It's bad manners to interrupt someone, and bad manners to ask a question then not listen to the answer. How bad it is varies according to the place, the people, and the relevance of what you're interrupting.
Sometimes the demands of good manners are outweighed by other considerations. In a situation where time has value, as in a bridge tournament, I can understand someone interrupting a response which is both lengthy and irrelevant. I'm not, of course, saying that your response fell into this category.
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Granted that people do interrupt explanations, when they do it seems to me they're saying "I'm trying to prevent either (1) your partnership from having a UI problem or (2) your partnership from cheating". If it's (1) I wonder why an opponent would want to be so generous. If it's (2), well, hypothetically I would tell such an opponent to kiss my butt.
I can also understand interrupting an explanation for reason (1). Other things being equal, of course one should try to avoid giving the opponents a UI problem. We play bridge for enjoyment. Winning by playing better than your opponents is more enjoyable than winning because they had a UI problem. Losing because you had a UI problem isn't much fun either.
I ask a lot of questions at the table, often in situations where I have no immediate need to know. If, in the course of the answer, it becomes clear that they don't have an agreement, I sometimes interrupt in order to limit the opponents' UI problems. I'm surprised that you find such an attitude unusual.
Some people may interrupt for reason (2). That may be because they don't understand the UI rules, or because their default position is not to trust their opponents, or because they themselves would use the UI in such a situation and it doesn't occur to them that you might not. Regardless, it says more about them than it does about you.
This post has been edited by gnasher: 2012-March-10, 03:50