Apple commits to replacing non-inclusive terms across its developer ecosystem – 9to5Mac

Joining a wider industry shift, Apple announced that it is working to replace exclusionary language in its developer documentation and APIs with alternative terminology.

Renaming things takes time and effort as large parts of infrastructure have to migrate in response. For third-party developers in the App Store, Apple will be changing the names of APIs used in their code where appropriate, which will also necessitate engineering work to migrate.

Examples of exclusionary terminology include using a noun like master to describe the primary code repository. Apples source control features in Xcode, starting with Xcode 12, now names the default branch main by default. Github and other companies announced similar policy changes earlier this year.

Similarly, Apple is replacing the usage of whitelist and blacklist in its documentation with allow list and deny list, to eradicate possible discriminatory connotations. These phrases have long-established technical definitions, but changing to alternative words removes any possibility of confusion or misinterpretation.

As a company, Apple is auditing its frameworks for similar language that warrants adjusting. Developers can expect to see the introduction of renamed APIs in future versions of iOS 14, macOS Big Sur, and the like.

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Apple commits to replacing non-inclusive terms across its developer ecosystem - 9to5Mac

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