On 10/03/2021 10.30, Antoine Pitrou wrote:
On Wed, 10 Mar 2021 10:30:43 +0900 Inada Naoki <songofacandy@gmail.com> wrote:
On Wed, Mar 10, 2021 at 10:10 AM Ivan Pozdeev via Python-Dev <python-dev@python.org> wrote:
On 10.03.2021 3:53, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Wed, Mar 10, 2021 at 11:47 AM Damian Shaw <damian.peter.shaw@gmail.com> wrote:
Does 'master' confuse people? There's a general movement to replace language from common programming practises that derive from, or are associated with, the dehumanization of people. Such as master and slave, as well as whitelist and blacklist.
Is that *actually* the origin of the term in this context, or is it the "master", the pristine, the original from which copies are made? There's no "slave" branch anywhere in the git repository.
It is, actually, the ultimate origin of the term.
A more immediate origin is the master-slave architecture (the master agent initiates some operation and slave agents respond to it and/or carry it out).
Petr Baudis (who named "master" branch) says its origin is "master recording". So it is unrelated to master-slave. https://twitter.com/xpasky/status/1272280760280637441
And the origin of the English word is the latin noun "magister": https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/magister#Latin
Words change meaning. For example take the word "dumb". It used to mean "mute" or "speechless". Ableism turned its meaning into "stupid" / "nonintellectual" as people equated speaking/hearing disability with mental disability. Fun fact: German language adopted the new meaning while Dutch language kept the original meaning of the word. In German phrase "Bist du doof?" translates to "Are you dumb?" while the Dutch sentence "Ben je doof" means "Are you deaf?". I grew up close to the border of the Netherlands and had a friend who's little brother was deaf. This caused some confusing on my side when he told a Dutch person "mijn broer is doof".