This is my comment, more fleshed out
I feel a simple script by the administrator can do the entire job.
I respectfully disagree here. Something "simple" would be a statement like the below:
UPDATE dbo.Posts SET Body = REPLACE(Body,'master','main');
This would very likely break the validity of 1000's (if not 10,000's) of answers and questions. Just because something references master
doesn't mean that that application have changed their processes. Take the RDBMS that Stack Overflow uses, SQL Server, which currently still uses master
as one of the system database names. I (honestly) don't expect that to change any time soon as it would be a huge breaking change.
Speaking of SQL Server, with the above it would need to at least maintain the casing, and that is (honestly) not very simple in SQL Server without CLR functions; it sucks at string manipulation.
To be able to do something like this, you would need to analyse the specific snippet the "offending" word appears in (such as "master", "slave", "white list"), ensure that changing "offending" words does not break the existing code example for the language it is specific for (and version if relevant), and then correct it to the relevant new name (such as "parent", "child" and "green list"/"allow list"). That would be a incredibly huge undertaking.
At best, changing existing posts to conform with the new terms would need to happen on a case by case analysis for each post; let's be real, that's never going to happen.
If you are personally offended by the posts use of words that can be misinterpreted then submit an edit request on the post, but ensure it does not break that code. For example, changing code like EXEC master.sys.sp_executesql @SQL;
to main.sys.sp_executesql @SQL;
would break the code. That means you need to do (significant) due diligence before you make that edit.
UPDATE dbo.Posts SET Body = REPLACE(Body,'master','main');
would likely break the validity of 1000's (if not 10,000's) of answers and questions. It would, at least, need to maintain the casing, and that is (honestly) not very simple in SQL Server without CLR functions; it sucks at string manipulation. Changing all of these "offensive" words to something inoffensive would be a huge undertaking.master
default like stackoverflow.com/q/42871542/3001761. Also I don't think git has changed the default, just added a way for it to be configured and overridden.UPDATE dbo.Posts SET Body = REPLACE(Body,'master','main');
will not solve the problem. Of course, it needs a little bit more complicated work. Like filtering all tags related to github and git and changing only if it contains git in the answer. This would rectify in a lot of answers but it is highly unlikely to screw up right oncemaster
are the master branch, and should be changed.master
. First, contrary to popular belief it is neither racist nor offensive term. Next, it carries more meaning than simple name in Git context. It depicts default repository branch. So if someone asks about doing something in context ofmaster
branch then there may be differences in what happens with such default branch comparing to any other randomly named branch. If people want to rename their branches, fine... but don't force it on everyone esle.