Re: Fwd: I-D Action: draft-hansen-nonkeywords-non2119-04.txt

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On 4 March 2016 at 08:29, Brian E Carpenter <brian.e.carpenter@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

When reviewing documents for Gen-ART I quite often find myself asking the
authors something like this (extracted from a recent thread on the Gen-ART list):

>>>
>>> Firstly, shouldn't that "should" be a SHOULD?
>>
>> Yes, that should be a SHOULD. Good catch

Now if that "should" had been disguised as "ought to" I would probably not
have noticed, but it ought to have been changed to "SHOULD" anyway.


​This brings to mind RFC 6919.​

I'm happy to encourage disambiguation by avoiding "should" when we *don't* mean "SHOULD," but we'd have to be quite sure that that is the case. It's not enough to just say: 'never write "should;"' and we wouldn't want to give anyone the impression that that's what we're saying.

Cheers
--
  Matthew Kerwin
  http://matthew.kerwin.net.au/

[Index of Archives]     [IETF Annoucements]     [IETF]     [IP Storage]     [Yosemite News]     [Linux SCTP]     [Linux Newbies]     [Fedora Users]