• @stuckgum@lemmy.ml
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    244 days ago

    Can you please make a few more posts about this? I don’t think you got your point across yet.

      • @braindefragger@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        don’t use lemmy lol

        If you feel this strongly about web a browser that’s not built yet, how could you possibly be using lemmy, knowing what you do about their devs?

        Where’s your line?

  • @RobotToaster@mander.xyz
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    174 days ago

    Wait, so you made all these posts because the author uses generic masculine for documentation?

    That’s it?

    I was hoping for something more dramatic.

  • Lemongrab
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    4 days ago

    It think the discussion of this issue has been thoroughly explored in your other post on the “free and open source” community. People know about this now. Is there anything else to cover? All that will be talked about is either “wow, that was an overreaction from the Dev, they seem close-minded” or “you should separate the tech from the developer” or people (bigots) just saying they think he made the right choice.

    The discussion is stale.

    • @apfelwoiSchoppen@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      I just found out about it from this post. If you dont want to see the post, keep scrolling.

      And if my opinion matters, that dude can get bent. It is such a small request to be inclusive. Such small requests can be so much to so many.

      • @HumanPenguin@feddit.uk
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        124 days ago

        Agreed. Most of us really do not think about this shit as often as we should. I know I am guilty of assuming he when typing. I know because I make an effort not to be. And notice how often I need to correct text. Being older than many developers. I just grew up with the assumptions. So like many my age needed my attention drawn to the societal indoctrination.

        People politely pointing it out is important. As is people volunteering to help correct older documentation.

        • Lemongrab
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          44 days ago

          This is true. I agree that developers should use more inclusive language in their documentation. I mostly just thought people saw the other post already.

      • Lemongrab
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        24 days ago

        I was only commenting that this post has been posted already twice, once in a closely related community. I have already had to argue with people supporting the Dev’s choice to be bigoted. I will just scroll past, just not excited to see more transphobes crawl out of the woodwork.

        • @apfelwoiSchoppen@lemmy.world
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          4 days ago

          Certainly is not exciting. Not all of us follow every community/server though. Thanks for fighting the good fight. Cheers. (BTW love your username, I can hear the screams. 😆)

  • Shadow
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    14 days ago

    Ladybird is a fork of the serenity browser, no?

    Does this 3 year old pr involve anyone from the ladybird project?

  • @GravitySpoiled@lemmy.ml
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    4 days ago

    That would be more apropriate in a gender forum. This is about open source. I don’t get why a browser has a gender anway. Just use it instead of he or she.

  • @EasyDoesIt@lemmy.ml
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    -84 days ago

    i think that a gender neutral language can be inclusive for some people but at the same time can be an exclusive language, because can be confusing for other people, is not obvious that it’s the right choice, that’s my opinion

    • Lemongrab
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      4 days ago

      “Singular they” has been common in english since somewhere in the 1300s. Idk how it is confusing, and even if it is, do those individual’s opinion outweigh like grammar? If people are confused they can learn, lest they be confused forever. “They” in this instance would be replacing “he”, so I think the benefit is clear. Or avoid ambiguity by just saying “the developer” (cus I think it was Dev documentation iirc).

      Edit:
      Maybe it was referring to the browser itself? Therefore “it” would make things much less confusing.

    • In this context the use of “they” is just proper English though. I can’t fault someone who speaks a gendered language from using gendered pronouns as is proper in that language, but the use of “they” in English is correct and hardly political or exclusive. Every language is going to have rules that may be strange to non-native speakers, but any “confusion” is easily remedied by explaining that’s just how the language works. I find that’s also part of the fun of learning another language. I especially love trying to mix the rules of one language into another to see how silly it sounds. :)

    • @Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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      54 days ago

      Sorry but when you said “some people”, you didn’t explicitly specify the gender of the people you were referring to, so now I am confused and terrified. In future please use “some male people” or “some female people” to avoid inflicting your gender ideology on me.