Thanks for that. This pleases my inner grammar nazi. :) Lucian
-- Sent from the Delta quadrant using Borg technology! Nux! www.nux.ro ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Mike Tutkowski" <mike.tutkow...@solidfire.com> > To: dev@cloudstack.apache.org > Sent: Friday, 31 July, 2015 06:26:32 > Subject: Small grammatical point to clarify > Hi everyone, > > I just checked in a couple changes to messages.properties in master. > > One thing I'd like to note is what I changed in > e640e0cf6eb9508f74f9bad59519f7189da7d82e. > > https://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf?p=cloudstack.git;a=blobdiff;f=client/WEB-INF/classes/resources/messages.properties;h=f81a196cf711d709af6a399a6f5e6d275dd7e951;hp=dcbf6c83a24a4cfd6977659d4f531c64c1786edb;hb=e640e0cf6eb9508f74f9bad59519f7189da7d82e;hpb=c0230273cdbdf2558f4a0802d177bd5757de34fd > > In this commit, I changed "Setup" to "Set up" where applicable. > > This is not necessarily common knowledge among native English speakers, but > words like "Setup" versus "Set up", "Login" versus "Log in", etc. represent > the difference between the noun (or adjective) form versus the verb form. > > For example: > > Your setup is perfect. // "setup" being used in the noun form (similar to > the word "configuration" here) > > Follow the setup instructions. // "setup" being used in the adjective form > > versus > > I need to set up my system better. // "set up" being used in the verb form > > Not a big deal. :) Just something I noticed a while ago and finally > corrected. > > The most common one (which I may address later) is "login" versus "log in". > > Talk to you later! > > -- > *Mike Tutkowski* > *Senior CloudStack Developer, SolidFire Inc.* > e: mike.tutkow...@solidfire.com > o: 303.746.7302 > Advancing the way the world uses the cloud > <http://solidfire.com/solution/overview/?video=play>*™*