You won't.If you have a dual stack Windows PC, and a broadband router that is also dual stack, but the WAN connection is IPv4 only, you WILL have problems.
Why would you?
This is a complete pile of junk.When you want to connect (to let say Google), the DNS request will return AAAA records, and the PC will attempt to connnect on IPv6. Which will fail. And only after a long timeout it will switch to IPv4. The PC isn't aware that there is no route out of the LAN on IPv6.
Sorry to be that harsh, but any softer wording wouldn't make clear how much bullshit this is.
No external IPv6 connection = no IPv6 addresses on the LAN (except link local) = no connection attempt to public IPv6 addresses.
Problems do not appear until you also advertise at least ULAs, which certain devs and bad admins like you treat wrong.
While ULAs can in theory mean that the router can handle kind of address translation (That way you can even make your LAN IPv6 only without having an external IPv6 connection at all), in most cases there wont't be.
ULAs are not world routable.
Any good program "knows" that, but some will try to use them, so it's a good idea not to advertise ULAs if you do not have an external IPv6 connection or unless you really operate such a gateway.
Even more bullshit.And this is the reason why most people, consumers and businesses, disable the IPv6 stack in Windows if their network is not (end-to-end) IPv6 enabled.
99% of all end John Doe end users do not ever mess up with those settings.
They only do if they trust in bad advise like yours and start messing up their network.
In they end they will have their speed degraded by TCP Craptimizers, have to remember IPs to access their local devices, get address collisions because they remembered an IP wrong , wonder why their box is unable to open streaming sites at all or why they have to reconfigure the whole network just because they got a new router.
The famous "I once got told ..." in each and every problem thread after finding the problem.
I've spent enough time fixing networks "optimized" in such silly ways.
95% of all problems I had to solve are based on one of those pseudo-expert hints
- manually configure a static IP in /etc/network/interfaces
- disable IPv6
- ...
It has damn good reasons why the default configuration is the precise opposite of that.
I will never understand why people never ask how it can be that they have to enter http://10.8.99.240 to go to the web interface of their box after the WanWizard division de-optimized their LAN while they do not have to remember the IP for http://www.google.com