A user account is required in order to edit this wiki, but we've had to disable public user registrations due to spam.
To request an account, ask an autoconfirmed user on Chat (such as one of these permanent autoconfirmed members).
Style: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Words and phrases used as words — use quotation marks) |
(→Dictionary: we never settled newline / line break; we did settle nonzero) |
||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
* keepalive (though HTTP Keep-Alive [sic] header) | * keepalive (though HTTP Keep-Alive [sic] header) | ||
* metadata | * metadata | ||
* nonzero | |||
* referrer (though HTTP Referer [sic] header) | * referrer (though HTTP Referer [sic] header) | ||
* whitespace (though CSS white-space [sic] property) | * whitespace (though CSS white-space [sic] property) | ||
== Grammar == | == Grammar == |
Revision as of 11:41, 22 September 2017
Language
American English.
Dictionary
- bitrate
- cancelation
- canceled
- canceling
- colorspace
- keepalive (though HTTP Keep-Alive [sic] header)
- metadata
- nonzero
- referrer (though HTTP Referer [sic] header)
- whitespace (though CSS white-space [sic] property)
Grammar
- Use 's for possesives, even when it looks unnatural.
- Use the Oxford Comma.
- Avoid "one of" unless it's followed by a bulleted list. You can normally leave it out and just use "or". If you cannot leave it out, that might be a good indication you want to use a bulleted list for clarity.
Casing
- web, unless at the start of a sentence
Punctuation
- Spaces around — (em dash)
- Lowercase after colon (The slot attribute is used to assign a slot to an element: an element with a slot attribute is assigned to the slot created by the slot element whose name attribute's value matches that slot attribute's value)
Words and phrases used as words
- When a word or term is not used functionally but is referred to as the word or term itself, enclose it in quotation marks. (See also: some examples that highlight why this is necessary.)
Tone
- Avoid using "simply" or suggesting that something is simple