"I changed it to female" - OMG YOU THINK WOMEN ARE BAD AT CODING
On a related note, when are we getting genderless pronouns for English?
Did I ever tell you that Programmer McCave
Had twenty-three variables and named them all `a`
Well, the programmer did. And that wasn't a smart thing to do.
You see, when the programmer wants to add `a` to 2
The programmer doesn't get a number oh no no no
All twenty-three `a`s cause a buffer overflow
This makes things quite difficult at the McCaves'
As you can imagine, with so many `a`s.
And often the programmer wishes that, while coding,
The programmer hadn't ignored that sense of foreboding
And called one of them runCount, And one of them lastNum
And one of them allSales and another roundSum
And one of them lastId, and another userNames
And one subnetMask, or numStartedGames
Any old names would actually do
even if they were just `bar` or `foo`
And adding hyphens or humble underscores
The programmer could have come up with so many more!
Like read_app_config_from_this_file_name
But no, the programmer went and called them all the same
If only the programmer hadn't given into the hype
And used a language strongly typed
The programmer would have avoided this horrible fate
But didn't and so now it's too late.
------------------------------------------------------There, FTFY. People will still think the programmer is a male, but now it's their own damn bias at fault :)
'he' was already genderless. 'She' was introduced to signify female, and 'he' become masculine by comparison. Perhaps in introducing 'she' we should have introduced something like 'ghe' for male, then we could keep 'he' as undefined, and everyone would be happy.
When enough people start using them despite occasionally annoying other people. :)
(I'm a fan of ve/ver/vis for someone of unknown/nonbinary gender, but in a case like this I would have just picked he or she and to hell with anyone who complains.)
As for the lack of wit, well, I'd suggest that's a more subjective thing....
I don't really think svs meant any offence, especially having now seen the original poem. I also don't think we can live in a society where everybody has perfectly-formed liberal views. At the same time, I'm not down with this "why are people so easily offended"/"turn down your offence-o-meter" argument that one hears when this comes up, mainly because it is a trivially easy card to play when you aren't the target of the stereotyping