Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers. Connect and share knowledge within a single location that is structured and easy to search. As for “Log in to host.com” versus “Log into host.com,” I would use the former because I think that “log in” is a fixed phrase. Martha’s answer to another question is also related.
Using “logging in” correctly
- As an attributive phrase, it is logged-in (logged-in users).
- Ironic that the instruction at the bottom of this page is ‘Sign up or login’.
- I’m here because I’m torn between log in to and log into and looking for clarification.
- ‘Enter your login details’.
- Martha’s answer to another question is also related.
Its Past Tense is logged in (I logged in yesterday). As an attributive phrase, it is logged-in (logged-in users). There are a lot of questions concerning the correct use if login, log in, etc. Because after the “logging in” I naturally would do a very short pause before continuing with an emphasis on “in the internal download area”.
- Ironic that the instruction at the bottom of this page is ‘Sign up or login’.
- I’m here because I’m torn between log in to and log into and looking for clarification.
- Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers.
- As an attributive phrase, it is logged-in (logged-in users).
- But I’ve decided to throw in my hand.
- ‘Enter your login details’.
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I’m a digital copywriter and have fought this battle on a few occasions. But I’ve decided to throw in my hand. ‘Enter your login details’. Only people like us care. I’m here because I’m torn between log in to and log into and looking for clarification. At this point in time, I suspect the prevailing opinion is correct – that log in to is preferable for purposes of clarity.
How to say correctly in the past “login” or “logined”? closed
Given that so much of the web environment isn’t being written by writers who care, I’m increasingly seeing ‘login’ used as a verb. And to be honest, once it’s normalised it will be the correct form. Log in is a verb, while login is a noun.
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Ironic that the instruction at the bottom of this page login regalcoin is ‘Sign up or login’. “You can always change this permission. Log (in on/into) the internal download area.”