Ah okay, thanks for clearing it up! I had no idea that double-original-op was actually a thing, and made me question myself about the meaning of the acronym.
For a second I was playing with the thought: what if this was done for an actual reason? Like, you don't have a garage, a huge storm is coming, and you don't want your quad to be blown into someone's bathroom. Plus, it makes the car heavier as well, so it's two birds with one stone. But there's nothing else I could think of (provided it's not a moron).
As a native speaker of a language that's unlike anything, I envy you folks so much. Knowing enough English and German you just look at it, and go 'aaah, speediness' (I guess the 'hast'/'hastig' bit is the same as 'haste'/'hasty' in English, and the 'het' is the same as 'heit' /~ness'/ in German).
You wouldn't guess the word, but reading it in context is so much easier.
I was looking for the changes - I hope I found them at the right place:
Resolves - Fix ancient ruins not spawning as much as they should
Maybe fix Android dev console - will require testing
Fixed Happiness being found as a global stat
Resolves - trigger conditionals are a superset not global uniques
"Unowned" capitalized for consistency, whoops
Added "unowned" tileFilter for
By SomeTroglodyte:
- Move parsing of localized numbers to UncivTextField
- Better Validation of Nation colors
- Avoid List.removeFirst() not being available on Android API 21..34 levels
- Minor Unique documentation improvements
- Fix doc writer escaping
By RobLoach:
- When capturing settlers, fix finding the Worker units with conditionals
- Add ability to remove policies with ModOptions
EDIT: Lol, how the heck do I remove colour highlighting if I want to keep the code style otherwise?
Oh, if anything, unless it's in the last element, it's easier to see paired items in the list ( ',' -> next element; ' and ' -> still the same element, with 'and' inside). When it's the last element, it's indeed ambiguous. And then there's /u/hakase 's comment:
“They went to Oregon with Betty, a maid, and a cook”, where Betty is the maid mentioned.
As a complete military noob: how does this affect the current conflict? By my naïve guess, it slows down the advance for a while, but ideally a well organised army has someone to stand in very shortly to minimise the effect. I understand it might lower the level of expertise, but considering such a large force (as in, many to pick from) I expect around the same level of competence from a substitute. Is it actually more significant than that? Are there other aspects I missed?
EDIT: Thank you all for the insights! It seems like it does have a tangible effect, and it actually takes longer to replace leadership than I anticipated. A life is a life, and nobody should die like this (especially when some power hungry megalomaniac sends you to), but you all helped me appreciate this news more, regardless.
I see where you're coming from. In school we were also taught to NOT put a comma before 'and' if it's a list. I also didn't quite get it, and found it weird. However, if you consider 'and' and a comma serving the same purpose (linking the elements in a list), then putting a comma before 'and' would just make either of them redundant. I'm not saying I prefer either of the two, but at least there is a reason to it.
Nice touch on the polydactyly!