On Tue, 2004-08-03 at 06:04, Frank Lichtenheld wrote: > On Mon, Aug 02, 2004 at 08:28:01PM +0100, Helen Faulkner wrote:
> > I'm sure that this is not _intended_ to be unfriendly, or even sexist. > > Maybe the people who wrote it, don't even realise why using such > > language is a problem. But it can't be that hard to automatically go > > I want to emphasize that. IME, except for political environments there > isn't any awareness of such problems in most parts of the population, Eeeesh. I remember when a technical book was published a few years back that used 'she' exclusively. I hear that Slashdot (naturally) went crazy about it. 'How dare they?' > If there is a consensus on this list to ask for a change please file > a bug against www.debian.org, best with a list of offending pages > (most of them should not contain texts where the problem occours). > Further discussion about the technical solution can then discussed > there. I suspect such a list would be, itself, many pages long. O'Reilly uses 'he' and 'she' interchangeably. O'R authors and editors make a point to roughly alternate during examples. In "Essential CVS", I would go through one example with a male project lead and a female programmer, then swap for the next example, then swap again for the example after ... or rather, I'd roughly do that. A strict analysis would probably show something like 47% of my programmers male, or 46% of my sysadmins female, or some other 'not quite 50/50' thing. I've received no complaints about my gender bias. It is a solution which seems to suit everyone. Jenn V. -- "Do you ever wonder if there's a whole section of geek culture you miss out on by being a geek?" - Dancer. My book 'Essential CVS': published by O'Reilly in June 2003. [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://anthill.echidna.id.au/~jenn/