Combat Rules Writing Style Guide: Difference between revisions
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
*MIC = Marshal-in-Charge | *MIC = Marshal-in-Charge | ||
*RMIC = Rapier Marshal-in-Charge | *RMIC = Rapier Marshal-in-Charge | ||
*EqMIC = Equestrian Marshal-in-Charge | *EqMIC = Equestrian Marshal-in-Charge | ||
*KEM = Kingdom Earl Marshal (or just Earl Marshal), not Kingdom Equestrian Marshal | *KEM = Kingdom Earl Marshal (or just Earl Marshal), not Kingdom Equestrian Marshal |
Revision as of 03:15, 5 April 2024
Acronyms
Avoid acronyms in the rules, they get in the way of understanding. The SCA is a well-established concept so can be used, including as SCA Inc, SCA Ltd and SCANZ
- MIC = Marshal-in-Charge
- RMIC = Rapier Marshal-in-Charge
- EqMIC = Equestrian Marshal-in-Charge
- KEM = Kingdom Earl Marshal (or just Earl Marshal), not Kingdom Equestrian Marshal
- KRM = Kingdom Fencing Marshal
- KEO = Kingdom Equestrian Officer
- SRM = Deputy Society Marshal for Rapier
- SEO = Society Equestrian Officer (Deputy Society Marshal for Equestrian)
Roles and job titles
- rostered marshal - when someone needs to be an authorised marshal who is a current member (not an auxiliary marshal)
- marshal - when any level of marshal will do - eg assistant marshal
- Marshal-in-Charge - person responsible for a combat event - eg a practice, or a tournament, or pick up field
- Kingdom Armoured Combat Marshal is shorter than Deputy Earl Marshal for Armoured Combat
- Kingdom Earl Marshal
- Society Marshal - not Society Earl Marshal. Marshal of the Society is also used.
Avoid gendered language
We are a Society of very diverse people, so should avoid using gendered terms. Use the singular they.
- his or her = their
- he or she = they
- himself or herself = themself (use themselves for more than one person)
- him or her = them
- My Lord/My Lady, you are slain = Fighter, you are slain
Fractions and decimals
- Use fractions when using inches (the decimal numbers get weird)
- Use decimals for metric units. Include the leading 0 in numbers like 0.75, not .75
- use plain text - don't use special characters as it breaks the pdf generation
Plain English
"Explain it like I'm 5." These rules should not need a university level of reading comprehension, they aren't legal documents, so don't write them in legalese. To make your content easy to understand, use plain English:
- Use clear and straightforward language.
- You can still use technical terms, you just need to explain them.
- Use the active voice, not the passive voice. You can tell you are using passive voice if you can add "by zombies" and it still makes grammatical sense.
- Passive: The form was processed and returned (by zombies).
- Active: We completed your request and mailed the form to you.
- Use positive language wherever possible.
- Be direct and concise.
- Begin instructional headings with an active imperative verb.
- Don't "undertake" anything.... "Undertake inspection of armour" - how about you just inspect armour!
Use these simple words to help make your content clear and easy to understand:
Use… | Not… |
---|---|
about | regarding in regard to in respect of relating to with reference to |
after | following on subsequent to |
agree | are in agreement |
ask | enquire |
because of | as a consequence of |
before | prior to |
by or from | on the basis of |
by or under | in accordance with pursuant |
changed or move | transition |
developing | the development of |
done | undertaken |
end or stop | discontinue terminate |
except for | with the exception of |
for | on behalf of |
help | assistance facilitate |
is | constitutes |
more | further |
most | the majority of |
question | enquiry |
so | accordingly |
start or begin | commence |
taking into account | with due regard to |
to | in order to |
try | attempt |
use | usage utilise employ |
Must/Should/May
Refer to RFC2119
Use "must/must not" when it's compulsory, and there are no situations where there is an option to do otherwise.
Use "should/should not" when it's the preferred option, but there are times/reasons that you might not.
Use "may" when it's optional - preferably use "are allowed to...". Avoid using "may not", use "are not allowed to...".
Hyphenation
Hyphenate when two words need to be taken together to describe (modify) another word (noun). Hyphenate words that have to be taken together to make sense.
Hyphenate examples | Don’t hyphenate examples |
---|---|
These tasks need your sign-off. | The marshal will sign off the paperwork. |
Callum is the Marshal-in-Charge of the tourney | Find out who is the marshal in charge of this bout. |
easy-to-read document | The document is easy to read. |
re-sign (sign again) | resign (give up) |
this is the up-to-date version of the rules | The rules are up to date. |