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ultracomfy_style_guide [2026/06/13 20:23] – created ultracomfyultracomfy_style_guide [2026/06/13 21:13] (current) ultracomfy
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 <fs xx-large>ULTRACOMFY Style Guide</fs></WRAP> <fs xx-large>ULTRACOMFY Style Guide</fs></WRAP>
  
-====== Date and Time ====== +====== Dates and Times ====== 
-===== Date =====+===== Dates =====
 ''DD.MM.YYYY'' = 13.06.2026\\ ''DD.MM.YYYY'' = 13.06.2026\\
 Numbers only, leading zeroes for days and months.\\ Numbers only, leading zeroes for days and months.\\
-ISO 8601 (YYYY-MM-DD or YYYYMMDD) would be preferred, but is not established. The American MM/DD/YYYY is rejected and strictly discouraged. +ISO 8601 (YYYY-MM-DD or YYYYMMDD) would be preferred, but is not established (ie. is impractical). The American MM/DD/YYYY is rejected and strongly discouraged. 
-====== Time ======+===== Times =====
 ''HH:MM'' or ''HH:MM:SS'' = 22:07 or 22:07:57\\ ''HH:MM'' or ''HH:MM:SS'' = 22:07 or 22:07:57\\
 24 hours with leading zeroes, typically without seconds. 24 hours with leading zeroes, typically without seconds.
  
 When talking to Americans, ''h:mmAM/PM'' = eg. 7PM, 7:52PM, 11:05AM\\ When talking to Americans, ''h:mmAM/PM'' = eg. 7PM, 7:52PM, 11:05AM\\
-Short hour without leading zeroes with short minutes, omitted on full hour, with AM/PM marker appended without space, both letters capitalized and no points (ie. not a.m.).\\ +Short hour (without leading zeroeswith long minutes, omitted on full hourAM/PM marker appended without space, both letters capitalized and no points (ie. not a.m.).\\ 
-May be used for its colloquiality in some other informal settings.+May be used for its colloquiality in some other informal settings.\\ 
 +''HH:MM:SS AM/PM'' (= 05:30:21 PM) used as long format. Leading zeroes, AM/PM capitalized with space but still no points.
  
 ====== Words ====== ====== Words ======
 +===== Language =====
 +''English, then Chinese, then German''\\
 +More speakers of a language is better. English is best, Chinese is a viable backup. Personally I cannot speak Chinese, the only language I know besides English is German. In cases where I must speak German (like 99% in IRL) I do so begrudgingly.
 +
 ===== General Style ===== ===== General Style =====
-''American English''Analyzation\\ +''American English and British English: Clarity-Based, then Consistency-Based, then American English, then Both''Soccer (Clarity), "the police is" (instead of "the police are", for Consistency), [[:declarate]] (Consistency), Democratization (American English), Flat/Apartment (Both) 
-Per case basis, in most cases American is preferred, though some exceptions (laser, not lazer) exist. In many technical contexts British English is preferred.+Per case basis, in most cases American is preferred. In many technical contexts British English is preferred, although some exceptions exist.\\ 
 +British English may be used in some cases to sound posh, especially in formal matters.
  
 ===== Semantic Adjustments ===== ===== Semantic Adjustments =====
 ''Non-Standard Clarifying Letters''\\ ''Non-Standard Clarifying Letters''\\
-eg. Zeroes (not zeros), Consentual (not consensual), Preferred (not prefered); attempts to eliminate some special rules where appropriate for consistency.+eg. Zeroes (not zeros), Consentual (not consensual); attempts to eliminate some special rules where appropriate for consistency.\\ 
 +Typically chosen depending on which style maintains previously established word style. If one deviates, the other is chosen. 
 + 
 +====== Grammar ====== 
 +===== Punctuation ===== 
 +All sentences end with some punctuation mark (. , ? ! ‽ etc.). Punctuation marks used inside of parentheses or quotation marks do not terminate a sentence (ie. ''He said "Hello.".'' is correct, despite the awkward looking period). This is for clarity and maintaining consistency. 
 + 
 +===== Comma ===== 
 +Standard comma rules, Serial comma (Oxford comma) discouraged (considered Non-Standard) but sometimes accepted as useful, particularly in very long lists.
ultracomfy_style_guide.1781382211.txt.gz · Last modified: by ultracomfy

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