From cadd89e8c7fc782a41e9959257d7c351d1424103 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Rachael Shaw Date: Wed, 12 Jul 2023 15:05:57 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] Handbook: Add missing ")" (#12733) --- handbook/company/why-this-way.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/handbook/company/why-this-way.md b/handbook/company/why-this-way.md index 1bf7c34623..d9dcb88cee 100644 --- a/handbook/company/why-this-way.md +++ b/handbook/company/why-this-way.md @@ -257,7 +257,7 @@ In sentence case, we write and capitalize words as if they were in sentences: > Ask questions about your servers, containers, and laptops running Linux, Windows, and macOS -As we use sentence case, only the first word is capitalized. But, if a word would normally be capitalized in the sentence (e.g., a proper noun, an acronym, or a stylization) it should remain capitalized. User roles (e.g., "observer" or "maintainer" and features (e.g. "automations") in the Fleet product aren't treated as proper nouns and shouldn't be capitalized. +As we use sentence case, only the first word is capitalized. But, if a word would normally be capitalized in the sentence (e.g., a proper noun, an acronym, or a stylization) it should remain capitalized. User roles (e.g., "observer" or "maintainer") and features (e.g. "automations") in the Fleet product aren't treated as proper nouns and shouldn't be capitalized. The reason for sentence case at Fleet is that everyone capitalizes differently in English, and capitalization conventions have not been taught very consistently in schools. Sentence case simplifies capitalization rules so that contributors can deliver more natural, even-looking content with a voice that feels similar no matter where you're reading it.