Pronouns are tricky. Writing correspondence or copy with your users preferred pronoun in mind is even harder.
Wanting to break out of the gender binary damn near impossible - until now. django-pronouns
is here to help!
When a user is signing up, they can select their preferred pronouns (usually disguised as a gender option).
The usual suspects (s/he) are there, as well as more neutral ones (they, it, xir, etc). Using them in your
copy is as simple as working out which form you need, and django-pronouns
will do the rest. Observe:
>>> "{{ user.pronoun.subject|title }} is awesome."
"She is awesome"
>>> "It is {{ user.name|pluralize }} birthday today. Go wish {{ user.pronoun.object }} happy birthday!"
"It is Tims birthday today. Go wish him happy birthday!"
>>> "{{ user.name }} looked at {{ user.pronoun.reflexive }} in the mirror"
"Alex looked at himself in the mirror"
>>> "{{ user.pronoun.possessive_determiner|title }} stuff is on the table."
"Her stuff is on the table"
>>> "This guitar is {{ user.pronoun.possessive_pronoun }}"
"This guitar is hers"
If working out which form is too annoying, we can help there as well. Each of the five forms has a number of aliases, consisting of the feminine and masculine forms joined with an underscore, as well as the (new) Spivak forms:
- Subject:
he_she
,she_he
,ey
- Object:
him_her
,her_him
,em
- Reflexive:
himself_herself
,herself_himself
,emself
- Possessive determiner:
his_her
,her_his
,eir
- Possessive pronoun:
his_hers
,hers_his
,eirs
Spivak was chosen as it is one of the only forms that is unambiguous across all five forms.