Current (SVN) development discussion thread

BUG options - cannot locate settings folder.
How do I solve this?
 
Is there a UserSettings folder in your DoC folder?
 
Then update it again. It's in the SVN repository.
 

It always surprises me when foreigners who've grown up in their countries know perfect English. Heck, you're better than me.
 
I doubt that, but it's always nice to hear when people can't tell I'm ESL.
 
I doubt that, but it's always nice to hear when people can't tell I'm ESL.

How is your spoken English? Do you have an accent?
 
I can't really say what my accent sounds like. People have told me that it's like an Estuary accent but I don't know.
 
Oh that looks cool, will do!
 
That's mine.

I don't think it means a lot though, because unfortunately the quiz was focusing more on vocabulary and therefore is better to determine a dialect than an accent. I don't really think that I have a specific dialect, but I still have an accent. It was also limited the US which is another reason. For think for some reason I sound more British.
 
That's mine.

I don't think it means a lot though, because unfortunately the quiz was focusing more on vocabulary and therefore is better to determine a dialect than an accent. I don't really think that I have a specific dialect, but I still have an accent. It was also limited the US which is another reason. For think for some reason I sound more British.

Do you live in Germany? You certainly sound like you learned British English when using phrases like "Estuary," which I had to look up.
 
New commit:
- fixed automatic connection of small islands to the trade network
- the British isles are a separate continent from Europe again
- the Trans-Siberian Railway is now part of the first Russian UHV goal

Kind of interesting to see where non-Americans would fall in terms of dialect.
As I said, probably nowhere really (except for the accent part of a dialect). The "what do you call X" questions didn't really apply to me because either the concept is so narrow that I don't know the specific word for it, or I use all the terms interchangeably.

I would've preferred more questions along the lines of "do you say been as in bin or as in bee?".

Do you live in Germany? You certainly sound like you learned British English when using phrases like "Estuary," which I had to look up.
I do. And I used the word Estuary because that's what I've been told my accent sounds like (although I knew what an estuary is).

Maybe it's because many musicians and bands I like are British? I don't know.
 
The thing that irked me was "what do you call something that carries freight on a highway. Examples... rig, eighteen wheeler, semi, semi truck, etc..."

I call them freight trucks. I seem to be the only person in the world who does. They are trucks that carry freight.
 
I've only heard "tractor-trailer" and "18-wheeler", and I don't think I've said any of those words in my entire life. (Honestly, the word "truck" works fine 99.99% of the time.)
 
That's mine.

I don't think it means a lot though, because unfortunately the quiz was focusing more on vocabulary and therefore is better to determine a dialect than an accent. I don't really think that I have a specific dialect, but I still have an accent. It was also limited the US which is another reason. For think for some reason I sound more British.

I think British English is typically taught in schools in Europe, so I would expect most Europeans who didn't go to the US/Canada/Australia to learn English at some point to speak English closest to British English. My understanding is that Estuary English is considered closest to "proper" in England (though of course what is "proper" is going to be controversial and laden with class overtones as well--it is England), so I would expect that to be the accent/dialect used in teaching English on the Continent.
 
It's true that officially Oxford English is taught in German schools, but in practice you'll hear whatever accent your teacher grew into.

In my case it's not very relevant anyway. My practiced English was rather bad while I was in school.
 
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