See in-line; On Wed, May 4, 2016 at 4:39 AM, Wolfgang Enzinger <sqlite at enzinger.net> wrote:
> > Two more typos (IMHO, I'm not a native English speaker): > > "where not being recognized" -> "were not being recognized" > > "Where" could be right or wrong, but I suspect this is the correct word. WHERE would mean something along the lines of what kind of situation something isn't being recognized, or maybe a set of conditions that make something unrecognized, or encompassing and general reasons, or something along that line. I'm struggling to find another example, as it is 7:17 am, I got out of bed 5 minutes ago, and have yet to have any of my cold coffee. ;) "Were" would be a past tense to something specific not being recognized. "Because of the masks, Jack and Jill were not being recognized by the facial scanner"... (Weak sauce, I know...) The prefix to that sentence would define which would be the correct term to use. > "that can causes incorrect results" -> "that can cause incorrect results" > Your correction here is correct.

