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Comment by woodruffw

1 day ago

I don't think that's really clear. I think we could both defer to the OP clarifying.

For pedantry's sake: neither i.e. nor e.g. would be correct here. You want cf. ("conferatur") to invite a comparison; e.g. is when an example pertains to an instance. In this case uv would not pertain to the instance, because Astro is not Astral.

cf. would invite a fair bit of confusion on an article about cloudflare

  • I agree! That's why I think it's probably just a confusion between entities. It doesn't make sense either as example or as a comparison (although IMO it makes more sense as the latter).

    (For the OP: I'm sorry if I misinterpreted you.)

    • It's all good. Hardly matters. It was just becoming too big a discussion for something far too minor. Any frustration I had from being misunderstood (primarily self-directed) was alleviated from satvikpendem guessing correctly what I intended.

"e.g." IS correct because uv is an example or instance of a dev tool.

  • "e.g." isn't used correctly here. It's intended use is as a connector linking a clause to examples supporting that clause. You can't simply substitute "for example" with "e.g." anywhere in a sentence and expect it to function correctly.

    Regardless, these Latin abbreviations best avoided entirely due to the surprising number of readers who don't understand them.