Careful what you read.
Tereza, et al, I've been reading an old paperback, The Best of Sail Trim, a compilation of articles from Sail Magazine, first published in 1975; my copy was of the sixth printing in 1985.The first article, by Herb Hild, titled "Mainsail on the Wind -- Pointers for pointing," has this to say:"In light air the sail must be full, with the draft in the middle third of the sail and the forward one third of the sail shaping gradually and smoothly from the mast to the point of maximum draft. The after one third of the sail that includes the leech should shape to weather just enough to induce a slight weather helm."For light air sailing, the outhaul should be slackened and the boom positioned close to the centerline of the boat. Set the mainsheet traveler a bit to windward. This permits the mainsheet to hold the boom amidships without tightening down on the leech. Experiement with the mainsheet and traveler until the boom is on the centerline and the mainsheet is sufficiently trimmed to shape the leech slightly to weather."Perhaps sail theory, and sails, have changed over the past 20-30 years. Perhaps there's a subtlety here that I'm missing and Alan, Don and Herb are not so much in opposition. Perhaps it's all a matter of degrees.In any event, I'm not salty enough to disagree with anyone.Mac