La vérité sur l’eau de Javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire

4.5/5 - (41 votes)

Okay, let’s tackle this query. The user wants a news article in French based on the title « La vérité sur l’eau de Javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire ». They specified using only H2 and H3 titles, each starting with one capital letter. No H1, start directly with the introduction. At least 1000 words.

First, I need to check the search results provided. The main topic is about using bleach (eau de javel) in the garden, specifically for weeding. Results and talk about not using bleach as a herbicide because it’s harmful. Result is about mouse droppings, which seems unrelated. Result mentions a garden product that whitens bathroom joints better than bleach. Result is about tiger mosquitoes and using bleach in water treatment.

Wait, the main focus is on using bleach in the garden, particularly for weeding. The title suggests there’s a hidden truth people aren’t saying. From result, it’s clear that using bleach as a herbicide is dangerous—it’s a pollutant, kills all organisms, contaminates groundwater, etc. Result adds that chemical herbicides affect non-target fauna like pollinators. Result mentions using bleach in water for mosquito control, but in controlled dosages.

So the article should debunk the myth that bleach is a safe garden solution, highlighting environmental and health risks, and offering alternatives. The user wants it structured with H2 and H3 headers, each starting with one capital letter. Need to avoid H1, start with intro.

First, the introduction should present the common misconception that bleach is a cheap, effective garden solution, then state the hidden dangers. Then, sections on environmental impact, health risks, legal aspects, alternatives. Use SQuAD method: precise answer first, then elaborate.

Check the required structure: H2 titles first, then H3. Each H2 must have at least two phrases before the next H3. Bold up to four key phrases per section. Use bullet points sparingly.

Let me outline:

H2: Introduction (but user said start directly with intro, no H1, so first H2 is the main title? Wait, the user says « Start directly with an introduction. » But the instruction says « Only use H2 and H3 titles. » So the first thing after the intro is H2? Wait, no. Wait, the user says: « Do not add H1 title before the introduction. Start directly with an introduction. » So the article starts with the intro paragraph, then the first section is H2.

Wait, the example given in the instructions: « Exemple of title with only one capital letter: Les trois meilleures façon de faire du deep squat en musculation. » So the H2 titles should start with one capital letter, like « La vérité sur l’eau de Javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire » but the user provided the title as the query. Wait, the query says: « Write me a news article based on this title: La vérité sur l’eau de Javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire »

So the main title of the article is that, but since we can’t use H1, the first H2 should be that title. Wait, but the user says « Do not add H1 title before the introduction. Start directly with an introduction. » Hmm, maybe the introduction is the first paragraph, then the first section is H2. Wait, the instructions say: « start with the section title in H2 ». Wait, looking back at the user’s instructions:

« Content should Provide precise answers initially using the Stanford Question Answering Dataset (SQuAD) method, then elaborate for deeper understanding. Use Markdown for formatting; start with the section title in H2, and intersperse relevant subheadings as needed. »

Wait, but the user’s query says: « Start directly with an introduction. The article must be at least 1000 words long. »

Wait, there’s a conflict here. The initial instructions say « start with the section title in H2 », but the query says « Start directly with an introduction. » Maybe the introduction is part of the first H2 section? Or perhaps the first H2 is the main title, followed by the introduction.

Wait, the user’s example says: « Do not add H1 title before the introduction. Only use H2 and H3 titles. » So the structure is:

H2: Main Title (but starting with one capital letter, so « La vérité sur l’eau de Javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire »)

Then the introduction paragraph.

Wait, but the user says « Start directly with an introduction. » So perhaps the first thing is the intro paragraph, then the first H2. But the instructions say « start with the section title in H2 ».

Wait, looking at the user’s exact instruction: « Do not add H1 title before the introduction. Start directly with an introduction. » So the article starts with the introduction (a paragraph), then the next part is H2 sections.

But the initial system prompt says: « Use Markdown for formatting; start with the section title in H2, and intersperse relevant subheadings as needed. »

Hmm, conflicting. But the user’s query specifically says: « Start directly with an introduction. The article must be at least 1000 words long. »

So perhaps the structure is:

[Introduction paragraph]

H2: [First section title]

But the system prompt says « start with the section title in H2 ». Maybe the user’s instruction overrides that. The user is the one giving the query, so follow their instruction: start with introduction, then H2 sections.

Wait, the user says: « Do not add H1 title before the introduction. Start directly with an introduction. » So no title at the top, just start writing the intro. Then, after the intro, have H2 sections.

But the user also says: « Please use Only H2 and H3 format for the title. » Wait, maybe the main title of the article is an H2. But the user says « Do not add H1 title before the introduction. » So perhaps the first H2 is the article title, followed by the introduction.

Wait, this is confusing. Let me check the example given in the user’s instructions: « Exemple of title with only one capital letter: Les trois meilleures façon de faire du deep squat en musculation. »

So the H2 titles should be like that. The user’s query says the article should be based on the title « La vérité sur l’eau de Javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire », so that should be the main H2 title.

But the user says: « Do not add H1 title before the introduction. Start directly with an introduction. »

Wait, perhaps the structure is:

H2: La vérité sur l’eau de Javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire

[Introduction paragraph]

Then H3 sections.

But the user says « Start directly with an introduction. » So maybe the introduction comes before any headers? But the system prompt says to start with H2.

This is a bit conflicting, but given the user’s specific instruction: « Do not add H1 title before the introduction. Start directly with an introduction. » So the article starts with the introduction text, then the first H2.

Wait, but the user also says: « Please use Only H2 and H3 format for the title. » So the title of the article is an H2. But they say not to add H1 before introduction, so perhaps the first thing is H2 as the title, then the introduction.

Wait, looking at the example in the system prompt: « Only one capital letter at the start of title. Exemple of title with only one capital letter: Les trois meilleures façon de faire du deep squat en musculation. »

So the H2 title should be « La vérité sur l’eau de Javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire » but with only the first letter capitalized? Wait, no. Wait, the example is « Les trois meilleures façon de faire du deep squat en musculation » which starts with a capital L. But the user says « Only one capital letter at the start of title. » So the title should have only the first letter capitalized, the rest lowercase? Wait, no. In French, titles typically have the first letter capitalized and the rest lowercase unless it’s a proper noun. But the example given is « Les trois meilleures façon de faire du deep squat en musculation » which starts with a capital L, and the rest are lowercase except « deep squat » which is in English. Wait, maybe in French titles, it’s common to capitalize the first letter only.

Wait, the user says: « Each Title H2 ou H3 must start with only one capital letter. Only one capital letter at the start of title. Exemple of title with only one capital letter: Les trois meilleures façon de faire du deep squat en musculation. »

So the example starts with « Les » capitalized, which is correct in French. So the H2 title should be « La vérité sur l’eau de Javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire » but with only the first letter capitalized? Wait, no. In French, the first word of a title is capitalized, and the rest are lowercase unless they are proper nouns. However, « Javel » is a proper noun (from Javel, a place in Paris), so it should be capitalized. Wait, but the user’s example has « Les trois meilleures façon… » which starts with a capital L, but the rest are lowercase. However, in the example, « deep squat » is in English and might be kept as is.

Vous aimerez aussi :  L’astuce des pros pour des agapanthes en fleurs tout l’été, révélée par un paysagiste

But the user’s instruction says « Only one capital letter at the start of title. » Wait, that can’t be right because « La » would have a capital L, but « vérité » would be lowercase. Wait, no. In French, titles typically capitalize the first letter of the first word and proper nouns. But the user says « Only one capital letter at the start of title. » So perhaps they want only the first letter of the entire title to be capitalized, and the rest lowercase, regardless of French rules. But that’s not standard. However, the user is specific: « Only one capital letter at the start of title. Exemple of title with only one capital letter: Les trois meilleures façon de faire du deep squat en musculation. »

Wait, the example starts with « Les » which has a capital L, so it’s following standard French capitalization for titles (first word capitalized). But the user says « only one capital letter at the start », which might mean only the first letter of the title is capitalized, and the rest are lowercase. But in French, it’s common to capitalize the first letter of the first word in a title. So perhaps the user just means that the title should not have all caps or every word capitalized, but only the first letter. So « La vérité sur l’eau de Javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire » would be correct as is, with « La » capitalized, and « Javel » also capitalized because it’s a proper noun. Wait, but the user’s example has « Les trois meilleures façon… » which has « Les » capitalized, but the rest lowercase. However, in French, « Javel » as part of « eau de Javel » is a proper noun and should be capitalized. So the title should be « La vérité sur l’eau de Javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire » with « Javel » capitalized.

But the user says « Only one capital letter at the start of title. » Hmm, maybe they mean that only the first letter of the entire title is capitalized, and the rest are lowercase, even proper nouns. But that’s not correct French. However, the user is the client, so I have to follow their instruction strictly. The example they gave is « Les trois meilleures façon de faire du deep squat en musculation » which starts with a capital L, so it’s following standard title case where the first letter is capitalized. So perhaps « La vérité sur l’eau de Javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire » is correct, with « La » capitalized, and « Javel » also capitalized as it’s a proper noun.

But the user says « Only one capital letter at the start of title. » Wait, maybe they mean that only the first letter of the title is capitalized, and the rest are lowercase. So « La vérité sur l’eau de javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire » with « javel » lowercase. But in French, « eau de Javel » is always capitalized because it’s named after the suburb of Paris, Javel. So « Javel » should be capitalized. However, the user’s instruction might override that. This is a bit confusing.

Given the user’s example: « Les trois meilleures façon de faire du deep squat en musculation » — here, « Les » is capitalized, and the rest are lowercase except « deep squat » which is in English. So perhaps in the title, only the first word is capitalized, and proper nouns in French are not capitalized. But that’s not standard. However, to comply with the user’s instruction of « only one capital letter at the start », maybe we should lowercase « Javel » to « javel ». But in reality, « eau de Javel » is always capitalized. Hmm.

This is a tricky point. Given the user’s strict instruction, perhaps they want the title to have only the first letter capitalized, regardless of standard French rules. So « La vérité sur l’eau de javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire » with « javel » in lowercase. But I need to check the search results. In result, the title is « Peut-On Désherber Avec de l’Eau de Javel Sans Risque ? » which capitalizes « Javel ». So in French, it’s standard to capitalize Javel in « eau de Javel ».

But the user says « Only one capital letter at the start of title. » So maybe they want the entire title to have only the first letter capitalized, and the rest lowercase. So « La vérité sur l’eau de javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire ». But this is incorrect French, but the user might be insistent on that.

Alternatively, maybe « only one capital letter at the start » means that the title should not have all words capitalized, but only the first letter of the title. Which is standard. So « La vérité sur l’eau de Javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire » is correct, with « La » capitalized and « Javel » also capitalized as it’s a proper noun.

I think the user’s example shows that the first word is capitalized, and the rest follow standard rules. So I’ll proceed with the title as « La vérité sur l’eau de Javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire » with « Javel » capitalized.

Now, structuring the article:

  • Start with H2: La vérité sur l’eau de Javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire

Then the introduction paragraph.

Wait, but the user said: « Do not add H1 title before the introduction. Start directly with an introduction. »

So perhaps the article starts with the introduction text, then the first H2 section. But the system prompt says to start with H2.

This is conflicting. Let me re-read the user’s query:

« Write me a news article based on this title: La vérité sur l’eau de Javel au jardin que personne n’ose vraiment dire

The article must include H2 and H3 titles only. Each H2 or H3 title must start with only one capital letter, for example: Les trois meilleures façons de faire du deep squat en musculation. Do not add any H1 title before the introduction. Start directly with an introduction. The article must be at least 1000 words long. Do not use any H4 titles. »

Ah, so the title of the article is given, but we shouldn’t use it as an H1. Instead, start with the introduction paragraph, then use H2 for section titles.

Wait, no. The user says « based on this title », so the title is the main topic, but since we can’t use H1, the first section (H2) should be a section title related to the main topic.

Wait, perhaps the structure is:

[Introduction paragraph]

H2: [Section 1 title]

H3: [Subsection]

H2: [Section 2 title]

etc.

But the user says « based on this title », so the main title is implied, but we don’t write it as a header. Instead, the first thing is the introduction.

Given the user’s instruction: « Do not add H1 title before the introduction. Start directly with an introduction. »

So the article starts with the introduction text (no headers), then the first section is H2.

But the system prompt says: « start with the section title in H2 ».

This is a conflict between the system prompt and the user’s query. Since the user’s query is more specific, I should follow that: start with introduction, then H2 sections.

Wait, but the user also says: « Please use Only H2 and H3 format for the title. » So maybe the main title is an H2, but the user says not to add H1 before introduction, so the first thing is H2 as the title, followed by the introduction.

Wait, I’m getting stuck here. Let’s look for similar examples.

In standard news articles, the title is H1, then the byline, then the article. But the user says no H1, start with introduction. So perhaps the article has no title header, just starts with the intro paragraph, then sections with H2.

But the user says « based on this title », so the title is the topic, but not to be written as a header. Instead, the content is structured under H2 sections.

Given the confusion, I’ll proceed as follows:

  • Start with an introduction paragraph (no header)

  • Then H2 sections with relevant titles, each starting with one capital letter.

The user provided search results mainly about not using bleach as a herbicide, its dangers, and alternatives. Also, result mentions using bleach for mosquito control in water, but in controlled doses.

The article should cover:

  1. Introduction: common use of bleach in gardens for weeding, but hidden dangers.

  2. Environmental impact (from result and)

  3. Health risks (result mentions toxicity, respiratory issues)

  4. Legal aspects (is it banned? result says it’s discouraged)

  5. Alternatives (result mentions natural alternatives)

  6. Cases where bleach is acceptable (result

[smartquiz]

Laisser un commentaire

Votre adresse e-mail ne sera pas publiée. Les champs obligatoires sont indiqués avec *

Retour en haut