bpo-33892: Doc: Use gender neutral words (GH-7770)
(cherry picked from commit 5092439c2cb32112a5869b138011d38491db90a9)
Co-authored-by: Andrés Delfino <adelfino@gmail.com>
diff --git a/Doc/tutorial/introduction.rst b/Doc/tutorial/introduction.rst
index 7176d81..22a209c 100644
--- a/Doc/tutorial/introduction.rst
+++ b/Doc/tutorial/introduction.rst
@@ -143,12 +143,12 @@
"doesn't"
>>> "doesn't" # ...or use double quotes instead
"doesn't"
- >>> '"Yes," he said.'
- '"Yes," he said.'
- >>> "\"Yes,\" he said."
- '"Yes," he said.'
- >>> '"Isn\'t," she said.'
- '"Isn\'t," she said.'
+ >>> '"Yes," they said.'
+ '"Yes," they said.'
+ >>> "\"Yes,\" they said."
+ '"Yes," they said.'
+ >>> '"Isn\'t," they said.'
+ '"Isn\'t," they said.'
In the interactive interpreter, the output string is enclosed in quotes and
special characters are escaped with backslashes. While this might sometimes
@@ -159,10 +159,10 @@
readable output, by omitting the enclosing quotes and by printing escaped
and special characters::
- >>> '"Isn\'t," she said.'
- '"Isn\'t," she said.'
- >>> print('"Isn\'t," she said.')
- "Isn't," she said.
+ >>> '"Isn\'t," they said.'
+ '"Isn\'t," they said.'
+ >>> print('"Isn\'t," they said.')
+ "Isn't," they said.
>>> s = 'First line.\nSecond line.' # \n means newline
>>> s # without print(), \n is included in the output
'First line.\nSecond line.'