conditionals - Future tense usage: "When you see it ..."


I wonder why the phrase is "When you see it you will shit brix," and not "When you will see it you will shit brix."


Is the version with two will incorrect? What grammar rule says that you should not use will see in the above phrase?



Answer



Adding to Elendil's answer, "When" refers to "the point in time at which an action occurs".


And at that point of time, you are actually "seeing it", which is why the verb is in the present tense.


When/If (somethings happens) then (something else will happen)


if (something will happen) would be impossible to evaluate as a condition since the future is unknown.


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