Creating And Replying Post Rules
Posted: Thu Nov 14, 2013 6:36 pm
Creating and Replying in the GhostBSD Forums:
Please ensure that your spelling, grammar, punctuation is understandable, this forum aspires to appeal to serious users, developers, programmers, administrators, hobbyists, and more generally: adults. We prefer that you write as such. This forum is not for children or texting teenagers! Respect your fellow forum members by posting clear messages in a way that people from all countries and all ages can understand, andwith respects to others and the project.
Remember:
Poorly written posts with bad spelling, capitalization, and punctuation make it even more difficult for non-English speakers to understand your message! Invest one extra minute in writing a readable and understandable post. Note: that a lot of people can only read the forums using translation services, and these services do not understand words like "im", "id", "thats", "dont", "cant", "w8", "pls", etcetera!
Opening remark:
Try not to take any of this personally, even when a moderator sends you to this page. These rules exist to make the forums an enjoyable experience and to help you make a good impression on other forum members. This will mean they will be more willing to help you. Invest some time in a good post, and fellow forum members will invest some time in helping you. It is that simple.
Basic spelling, Grammar, capitalization, punctuation:
Pay special attention to basic spelling, grammar, capitalization, punctuation, etcetera. Please, as a minimum, turn on your browser's spell-checking capability, and set it to English (US or UK) and correct any errors when you see them! New lines/sentences always start with a capital letter. The first person singular, also known as "I", is always written with a capital letter I. No exceptions.
For example, it's:
Do not, under any circumstances, ever use multiple question marks (???) or multiple exclamation marks (!!!) or any combination thereof.
Try not to confuse: it's and its -> "It's Sunday, I see a dog and its boss."
Try not to confuse: there, their and they're -> "There go the neighbours and their dog. They're going on holiday."
Try not to confuse: your and you're -> "Your house is where you're living."
It's always that's, isn't, won't, don't, didn't, wouldn't, hasn't, shouldn't, mustn't, can't, couldn't. Ok?
Try not to confuse: setup (noun!) and set up (verb!) -> "When I set up a server, I will end up with a nice setup." The same goes for backup and back up.
It's FreeBSD and GhostBSD, not fbsd, FBSD, freebsd, freeBSD, Freebsd, ghostbsd, gbsd, Ghostbsd or any other variation. Obviously, this does not apply to commands like freebsd-update. Please use capitals for 'system acronyms' like FTP, SSH, SSL, IRC, IMAP, POP, SMTP, TCP, UDP, ICMP, NAT, WAN, LAN, IDE, RAID, JBOD, ATA, SATA, PATA, SCSI, PCI, PCI-E, CAM, USB, GEOM, GELI, RAM, ROM, SSD, MMX, SSE, CD, DVD, ISO, IP, NIC, DNS, DHCP, CPU, UFS, UFS2, et cetera. Also use capitals for FreeBSD and GhostBSD versions: 8-STABLE, 8-RELEASE, 9-CURRENT, or when used in the shorter form: -RELEASE, -STABLE, -CURRENT, -BETA2, -PRERELEASE1, etc.
When talking about RAM or disk size, it's MB and GB, not 'megs', or 'gigs'. There's a space between a number and a unit, so 10 GB, not 10GB, and 100 Mbps, not 100Mbps.
Please don't start a post with "So I ..". This is not a bar where you strike up a conversation with a stranger. Just state your situation/question. Please don't behave like a child when referring to Microsoft or Windows. Writing things like Winblows, Winbloats, Micro$oft, Micro$hit, WinDOS, etcetera .. is simply childish! This is a GhostBSD forum. We're the adults in open source land. Ok? So we properly write Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, Debian, Ubuntu, MS-DOS, OpenBSD, NetBSD, etc. etc.
Even when English is not your first language (it isn't mine either), there's no reason to write ugly posts. So instead of wasting time on apologising for bad English, invest that time in writing a proper post. If you have a choice between learning English and learning FreeBSD or GhostBSD: learn English first. It's much more useful in the long run! Re-read and/or preview your post before you actually post it. Errors and sloppy writing can be very distracting, and they may prevent people from taking your post seriously. That means: no replies, no answers.
When you're typing a post in that little editing box, you don't have to press [enter] when you reach the right-hand side! Just keep on typing. The forums will do the rest. You only need to press [enter] (twice) when you want to start a new paragraph. We certainly do encourage using paragraphs in longer posts. HOWEVER, do not put every sentence in its own paragraph! We don't want to read a forum full of telegrams.
A short remark to (broadly speaking) "Eastern-European" posters: note that the English language makes extensive use of the article, like 'the' and 'a'. Please try to write:
I let you down here, some links to check and correct grammar.
http://www.reverso.net/spell-checker/en ... g-grammar/
http://spellcheckplus.com/
http://translate.google.com/
Please ensure that your spelling, grammar, punctuation is understandable, this forum aspires to appeal to serious users, developers, programmers, administrators, hobbyists, and more generally: adults. We prefer that you write as such. This forum is not for children or texting teenagers! Respect your fellow forum members by posting clear messages in a way that people from all countries and all ages can understand, andwith respects to others and the project.
Remember:
Poorly written posts with bad spelling, capitalization, and punctuation make it even more difficult for non-English speakers to understand your message! Invest one extra minute in writing a readable and understandable post. Note: that a lot of people can only read the forums using translation services, and these services do not understand words like "im", "id", "thats", "dont", "cant", "w8", "pls", etcetera!
Opening remark:
Try not to take any of this personally, even when a moderator sends you to this page. These rules exist to make the forums an enjoyable experience and to help you make a good impression on other forum members. This will mean they will be more willing to help you. Invest some time in a good post, and fellow forum members will invest some time in helping you. It is that simple.
Basic spelling, Grammar, capitalization, punctuation:
Pay special attention to basic spelling, grammar, capitalization, punctuation, etcetera. Please, as a minimum, turn on your browser's spell-checking capability, and set it to English (US or UK) and correct any errors when you see them! New lines/sentences always start with a capital letter. The first person singular, also known as "I", is always written with a capital letter I. No exceptions.
- There's NO space before a question mark (?), an exclamation point (!), a comma (,), a period (.), a colon (:), a semi-colon (;), after an opening parenthesis ((), before a closing parenthesis ()), etcetera.
- There's ONE space after a comma (,), a period (.), a question mark (?), an exclamation point (!), a colon (:) and a semi-colon (;), before an opening parenthesis ((), after a closing parenthesis ()), etcetera. Not two or three, ONE space.
- Why you should never, ever use two (or more) spaces after a period.
For example, it's:
- I, not i
- I'm, not Im or im
- I've, not Ive or ive
- and, not &
- don't/won't/can't, not dont/wont/cant
- doesn't/hasn't/wouldn't, not doesnt/hasnt/wouldnt
- want to, not wanna, and going to, not gonna
- don't know, not dunno or idk
- please, not pls or plz
- could, not cud
- problem, not prblm or prob
- you, not u
- through, not thru
- though, not tho
- before, not b4
- with, not w/
- without, not w/o
- download, not dl
- because, not bc, coz, cos, or cause
- of course, not ofc
- until, not till or til
- hardware/software, not hw/sw, H/W, S/W
- gateway, not gw or GW
- firewall, not fw or FW
- something, not sth/smth
- first, second, third, not 1st, 2nd, 3rd
- a lot, a while, as well, never mind, not alot, awhile, aswell, or nevermind
- configuration(s), permission(s), specification(s), developer(s), not config(s), perm(s), spec(s), dev(s)
Do not, under any circumstances, ever use multiple question marks (???) or multiple exclamation marks (!!!) or any combination thereof.
Try not to confuse: it's and its -> "It's Sunday, I see a dog and its boss."
Try not to confuse: there, their and they're -> "There go the neighbours and their dog. They're going on holiday."
Try not to confuse: your and you're -> "Your house is where you're living."
It's always that's, isn't, won't, don't, didn't, wouldn't, hasn't, shouldn't, mustn't, can't, couldn't. Ok?
Try not to confuse: setup (noun!) and set up (verb!) -> "When I set up a server, I will end up with a nice setup." The same goes for backup and back up.
It's FreeBSD and GhostBSD, not fbsd, FBSD, freebsd, freeBSD, Freebsd, ghostbsd, gbsd, Ghostbsd or any other variation. Obviously, this does not apply to commands like freebsd-update. Please use capitals for 'system acronyms' like FTP, SSH, SSL, IRC, IMAP, POP, SMTP, TCP, UDP, ICMP, NAT, WAN, LAN, IDE, RAID, JBOD, ATA, SATA, PATA, SCSI, PCI, PCI-E, CAM, USB, GEOM, GELI, RAM, ROM, SSD, MMX, SSE, CD, DVD, ISO, IP, NIC, DNS, DHCP, CPU, UFS, UFS2, et cetera. Also use capitals for FreeBSD and GhostBSD versions: 8-STABLE, 8-RELEASE, 9-CURRENT, or when used in the shorter form: -RELEASE, -STABLE, -CURRENT, -BETA2, -PRERELEASE1, etc.
When talking about RAM or disk size, it's MB and GB, not 'megs', or 'gigs'. There's a space between a number and a unit, so 10 GB, not 10GB, and 100 Mbps, not 100Mbps.
Please don't start a post with "So I ..". This is not a bar where you strike up a conversation with a stranger. Just state your situation/question. Please don't behave like a child when referring to Microsoft or Windows. Writing things like Winblows, Winbloats, Micro$oft, Micro$hit, WinDOS, etcetera .. is simply childish! This is a GhostBSD forum. We're the adults in open source land. Ok? So we properly write Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, Debian, Ubuntu, MS-DOS, OpenBSD, NetBSD, etc. etc.
Even when English is not your first language (it isn't mine either), there's no reason to write ugly posts. So instead of wasting time on apologising for bad English, invest that time in writing a proper post. If you have a choice between learning English and learning FreeBSD or GhostBSD: learn English first. It's much more useful in the long run! Re-read and/or preview your post before you actually post it. Errors and sloppy writing can be very distracting, and they may prevent people from taking your post seriously. That means: no replies, no answers.
When you're typing a post in that little editing box, you don't have to press [enter] when you reach the right-hand side! Just keep on typing. The forums will do the rest. You only need to press [enter] (twice) when you want to start a new paragraph. We certainly do encourage using paragraphs in longer posts. HOWEVER, do not put every sentence in its own paragraph! We don't want to read a forum full of telegrams.
A short remark to (broadly speaking) "Eastern-European" posters: note that the English language makes extensive use of the article, like 'the' and 'a'. Please try to write:
instead of:I looked at the system and found that the network card was no longer sending packets to the gateway
If you post an unreadable and/or immature message with bad grammar or spelling, dozens of exclamation marks and/or smilies, your posts may be deleted, and you may receive warnings, infractions and even a membership termination.I looked at system and found that network card was no longer sending packets to gateway
I let you down here, some links to check and correct grammar.
http://www.reverso.net/spell-checker/en ... g-grammar/
http://spellcheckplus.com/
http://translate.google.com/