No I didn't read it fully, I knew what the concept was called, found an article, skimmed it until I was sure it was talking about the thing I thought it was. I'm almost positive I was taught in school that "it's" is a valid possessive apostrophe case and honestly I think it's stupid that it's not. I find "its" more confusing personally.
>I knew what the concept was called, found an article, skimmed it until I was sure it was talking about the thing I thought it was
You just managed to summarise why having conversations with strangers is so difficult on the internet these days.
Instead of considering that you were incorrect, even for a moment, you sought an article that you thought would confirm the ideas that you already had. Without even actually reading it, you used it as evidence that you were correct all along.
Even though the article very clearly illustrates that you were mistaken.
You do understand that's not really what happened here right?
The concept IS called possessive apostrophe and literally until this minute I wasn't aware that "it's" isn't grammatically correct when the "it" in the sentence is being used possessively. I didn't just find an article I thought agreed with me and fire it off, I thought "it's" was valid and riffic didn't know about possessive apostrophes (which again, I had wrong in this case). I didn't look for "it's" in the article because that wasn't up for debate in my mind (again, I can't stress this enough, I was wrong about the usage, any comment I've ever made uses "it's" in this case because that's how I thought it was used), I was just looking for the concept as a whole to link. I got a minor piece wrong and you want to lump me in with everyone who picks the first article that "agrees" with them.
I'm not lumping you in with anyone, I merely commented on how you sent a link because you thought it advanced your position when it actually advanced the position of the person you were "correcting". It's a behaviour I see all the time now, from all sorts of people.
I certainly don't think less of you specifically for doing this.
I generally remember this bit of grammar as the apostrophe replacing the missing letters of the contraction (which is not needed for the possessive situation).