> So if someone criticizes a portion of your statement which is already countered by your original full statement, you're not allowed to remind your full statement. What kind of logic is that?
The other stuff in your comment did not "counter" what they said. You made statements about cross-vendor and cross-platform. They chose to only respond to one of those statements. That's not incorrect.
> This "correction" is incorrect because I already said on Linux
The first part of your comment specifically said "not "various OS' native APIs"". That goes beyond Linux. The later part of your comment was about Linux in particular, but your introduction was an overall statement that wasn't true.
> When you fragment a statement in a way that changes its meaning
They didn't. You misspoke and they didn't know what you actually meant.
And from your other post: > Obviously, I meant to say statement, not sentence, but I can't edit it anymore.
That was not obvious. They quoted an entire paragraph, and the subsequent paragraph does not change its meaning the way you're claiming it does.
The other stuff in your comment did not "counter" what they said. You made statements about cross-vendor and cross-platform. They chose to only respond to one of those statements. That's not incorrect.
> This "correction" is incorrect because I already said on Linux
The first part of your comment specifically said "not "various OS' native APIs"". That goes beyond Linux. The later part of your comment was about Linux in particular, but your introduction was an overall statement that wasn't true.
> When you fragment a statement in a way that changes its meaning
They didn't. You misspoke and they didn't know what you actually meant.
And from your other post: > Obviously, I meant to say statement, not sentence, but I can't edit it anymore.
That was not obvious. They quoted an entire paragraph, and the subsequent paragraph does not change its meaning the way you're claiming it does.