When planning a wedding, should you use WILL or WOULD?
If you had a cellular network send out part of someone to claim your reward, which method would they use? Whenever you get to enjoy this lesson or training, your anxiety is increased. If planning ahead doesn’t
work, then I will go to the other link that was provided.
What I am unclear about is how to decide between will and would here, and other parts of the sentence are adding to my confusion. How do I choose between this/that, doesn’t/didn’t, was/has been?
What is the ultimate need of a lawyer at home?
Is there another link to connect to?
So, is this good? How can we communicate our current plan?
If that doesn’t work then I would go to the other link that has been provided.
I don’t think this is what you’re trying to say, it’s a valid sentence, don’t you think it’s what you were trying to do? In this use, You just give advice to a listener about how to do something, and your listener is going to make an attempt at it. You are giving him advice about what to do if that advice does not work, by specifying what you would do in that situation.
If this…”, instead of “If that…”, the difference is in how close the speaker feels to the strategy being suggested, if you follow my meaning. What happens if both the listener and speaker are working on problems together? “That” puts some distance between the approach being suggested and the speaker. In many cases, they are interchangeable, but if the listener is going home to try the suggested approach, or waiting until later to do it, use “that”.
If you can’t take a link back to what you wished you did, you need to go to the other link provided.
Is correct that a speaker is narrated their thoughts during a situation that happened in the past?
There are some degrees of freedom in all of this, but I’ll point out a couple in the most recent case:
If that didn’t work then I would have gone to an other link that was provided.
is functionally the same (with a subtle distinction of bringing the conditional statement more into the present), similarly to how
If that hadn’t worked, then I would have gone to the other link that had been provided
is fair, but perhaps makes a vague distinction about when the company provided the link I imagine some speakers and some rule systems will have definite ideas about what is best in some of these, but the most important thing is to get the tense right in the main part of the sentence – e.g., repeating the word in a sentence well enough. If I want to go, I said “then I would have gone”, – and smoothing over any conflicts with your choices – “this”/”that” and related elements.
In all the above cases, you can simplify some problem by just saying “the link provided”.