Posted by Terryd on 20/10/2012 09:49:33:
Bad grammar and/or spelling can lead to misunderstanding, Remember the old joke about the Panda who 'eats shoots and leaves'. With a misplaced comma or two it takes on a new meaning entirely – 'eats, shoots, and leaves'
. Of course we know about the guy who ordered beans and toast. When he was served beans on toast, he complained, to be told that was what he ordered. "no", he replied, "I like my toast crisp, that's why I ordered beans and toast." 
Terry
Sorry Terry that doesn't wash with me. We are talking about people posting on an engineering forum, often complex solutions to problems that can't be grasped by the first read. So you re-read the reply / text until you understand it as a lot of thought is often involved in a text description with no pictures.
Now if it was an article you only read once like in a newspaper it could be different but the readers on here and in the mag are reading for learning.
I run the free advert site at homeworkshop,org.uk and on that site we have a regular poster who buys and sells who is very dyslectic [ who thought of that word ? even people who aren't dyslectic can't spell it ].
He's that dyslectic it's very hard to understand the posts but I go thru these, edit them and correct them and post them. If I didn't he would be picked on unmercifully by the grammar Nazi's when he doesn't deserve this.
I have absolutely no time for these grammar Nazi's who pick up on everyday mistakes often made by very informed people who may not have the education of others, be in a rush or many other reasons. End of the day the message is there.
Perhaps these people should throw their workshop door open so we can come round and take the piss out of what they are doing ?
Hey look your countersinks are all different depths, that tapped hole isn't square, you have left file marks on that piece.
WHY DON'T YOU TAKE MORE CARE.
John S.
P.S. Ironic isn't it that these posts with the most replies / read figures are always about NOT doing something useful.
[Edited due to bad spelling ] 
Edited By John Stevenson on 20/10/2012 11:02:35