Vampyr, on 2012-November-28, 20:12, said:
I have always been uncomfortable with the EBU position
No doubt some people are. However, there are a lot of people who prefer people to ask questions as asked. It is a pity that people should have to go on about irrelevancies when you want to know one specific thing. After all, there is a simple solution: if you want a general answer, just ask the simple question "What is the meaning of 3
♠?". But it seems reasonable to me that if I ask "How many points does 3
♠ show?" that I should get an answer that tells me just that.
Vampyr, on 2012-November-28, 20:12, said:
A player who asks "Weak or strong?" and not even "Weak, strong or intermediate?" is clearly an inexperienced player who has only heard of two possible styles and would not ever imagine that there are others. To answer "weak" and omit to mention that the bid shows diamonds and spades (or whatever) instead of clubs seems really mean, and I wish one didn't automatically get away with it.
My experience is that a player who asks this sort of question is often highly experienced and sometimes arrogant.
Zelandakh, on 2012-November-30, 02:42, said:
I agree with that but pointing it out simply got the response "This is not the Bermuda Bowl!" which was indeed true. The point is that this sort of thing happens routinely in clubs for explanations - how much worse would it be if we went over to announcements for complex conventions (that could be handled by an alert).
Not at all. Announcements are basically simple alerts that give a small amount of information, which is often all that is required. Whether something is alerted or announced, to get details you have to ask or check the SC.
Take, for example, "May be short". While that is often all you need to know, it covers a vast array of types, so assumptions cannot be drawn from it.