Regarding: 2nd paragraph - The New Version Numbering System (auxiliary letter): "The second number Y is incremented for any change that breaks forward*s* compatibility..."
Not that it matters much, but in general it seems that adding the "s" to backward and forward is more often done in British English vs American. Also, backward is said to be more used for the adjective and backwardS when used as an adverb. http://www.quickanddirtytips.com/education/grammar/backward-versus-backwards On Thu, Oct 8, 2015 at 2:11 PM, R.Smith <rsmith at rsweb.co.za> wrote: > More draft doc errors: > https://www.sqlite.org/draft/versionnumbers.html > > 1st paragraph - SQLite Version Numbers (typo for "through"): > "There are two strategies for version numbers in SQLite. The historical > system, in use from the first release on 2000-08-17 *though* version > 3.8.11.1 on..." > > --------------------------------------- > > 2nd paragraph - The New Version Numbering System (auxiliary letter): > "The second number Y is incremented for any change that breaks forward*s* > compatibility..." > > --------------------------------------- > > In https://www.sqlite.org/draft/releaselog/3_9_0.html > New features and enhancements (grammar typo): > "Enhance the dbstat virtual table so that it can be used as a table-valued > functions where..." > > I think it meant to read like this: > "Enhance*d* the dbstat virtual table so that it can be used as a > table-valued *function* where..." > > --------------------------------------- > > > Cheers, > Ryan > > _______________________________________________ > sqlite-users mailing list > sqlite-users at mailinglists.sqlite.org > http://mailinglists.sqlite.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sqlite-users >