Hello again,<div>I guess the main reason why I joined this mailing list today was to ask a very specific question:</div><div>Has there ever been a discussion about using gender-specific pronouns in applications?</div><div>
E.g., if your username is jennie, your online status should read "She is busy", "ocupada??" in Spanish. If it's John it should be "He is busy".</div><div><br></div><div>Personally, I've grown tired of having to use complicated he/she structures whenever I translate into Greek. Especially when I see what great pains developers have taken to avoid using complicated singular/plural structures. These days, dialogs don't say "13 second(s) remaining". They either say "1 second remaining" or "13 seconds remaining". And if your language has a different conception of plurality, this is also accommodated (for polish,there is a binary plural for "2 seconds remaining") . So, how come I cannot have "She is busy" or "She has won the game"?</div>
<div><br></div><div>Like I said, I don't really know if this idea has ever been discussed before. But I would like to see it being discussed, not just for FOSS, but for all software. And I would really like to see some concrete proposals from people with better coding skills than myself.</div>
<div><br></div><div>What I have been envisaging is this: Every time you're asked to create a username (mostly in messaging applications and games), you would also be asked "What pronoun would you like to use with this username?" And your options would be all the grammatically correct options available in your language. E.g., in German and Greek it would be masculine, feminine, neutral, in both singular and plural. Thus covering a range of choices, including nicknames based on inanimate objects or couples having joint acounts. Moreover, such an approach would alleviate many privacy and discrimination concerns, as opposed to a question like "Are you male or female?"</div>
<div>As for the technical side of things, I suppose that the singular/plural differentiation and localisation infrastructure would provide a good starting point for this.</div><div><br></div><div>Jennie</div><div><br></div>
<div><br></div>