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Many verbs that end with the suffix -ize in American English, end with -ise in British English. ... Both are perfectly correct English spellings. Typically British English speakers prefer 'authorise' and American English speakers prefer 'authorize', but in fact both spellings are correct 'British' usage.
What ever spelling works properly in Trainz without errors, and if that same spelling is used by all of N3V, then whichever of those spelling(s) is correctly used in Trainz, that is correct for Trainz
British (English) spelling predated US American dictionaries Americanized spelling, and if that same Australian spelling is in Trainz, the decision is N3V's choice
Funnily enough, we British used to use the "z" spellings some centuries ago. It may even be that the Yankers continued with it whilst the Limeys adopted the "s" just to annoy them (which is easy). The dafties still use imperial measurments an'all. Imperial, as in "subjects of the British Empire". Hee hee heee.
Lataxe
RE: "to make spelling easier and consistent)
For most of the worlds history there has been no "rules." I was shocked when reading a railroading book that Time Zone were essentially a Railroading necessity. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_zone
Before that, for the history of the world, each town, city, hamlet, whatever, could set the clock however they wanted. Imagine that. Something as important as "the time" and there were no rules. How did we manage?
RE: "to make spelling easier and consistent)
For most of the worlds history there has been no "rules." I was shocked when reading a railroading book that Time Zone were essentially a Railroading necessity. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_zone
Before that, for the history of the world, each town, city, hamlet, whatever, could set the clock however they wanted. Imagine that. Something as important as "the time" and there were no rules. How did we manage?
Before that, for the history of the world, each town, city, hamlet, whatever, could set the clock however they wanted. Imagine that. Something as important as "the time" and there were no rules. How did we manage?
Since it would be rare for most people to go five miles beyond their village it didn't matter what the time was thought to be anywhere else.