@Nooble Concern 1: a plagiarism software tool will think that I copied my code from there, which I obviously didn't. I wrote the entire source file. Concern 2: Another student finds it and uses it
@Vimzy If a tool detects it as the same, it becomes a simple matter of showing that you were the source (pretty simple to show it's your account). While it's clearly undesirable if somebody copies it, that's mostly their problem, not yours.
Okay, I was really worried because it took a lot of work and I didn't want to get in trouble, but if the "edited history" in questions isn't indexed by search engines, then the source code can't be detected by softwares, yea?
@AMostMajestuousCapybara Usually in fairly secret ways--otherwise, it would probably be fairly easy to defeat. Back when they owned Unix, AT&T supposedly had a tool that could detect many instances of Unix code being misappropriated, even when only looking at the executable produced, not the source code.
@Vimzy It's theoretically possible that something could index that, but I think it's pretty unlikely--and if something should arise, you seem to have a fairly solid (and innocent) explanation for what happened.
> Great track, what is this song about? I'm probably wrong but i think it's all about Canada and how Canadian culture is being washed away and the country is losing it's identity.
@Rapptz Strange story: I saw The Divinyls in concert once (but only for about one song). Unfortunately, somebody thought they'd be a good opening act for a hard rock band (Aerosmith) in a hard rock town (Spokane Washington, USA). They got booed off stage. The lead singer was on the radio the next day, and swore they'd never play there again.
@AMostMajestuousCapybara The revision history (as such) isn't supposed to be--but it's possible the question was indexed while the code was there (and not updated since).
@Jefffrey I, as a programmer, am well aware that (for example) "kilo" means 1024. While I agree that it's stupid to make exceptions, some ignorant people don't deal well with powers of two, so we make an exception for them even though it's really a lousy idea.
@Nooble Reputedly "Morris Garages". The original owner was a guy named William Morris. I always preferred Lotus to MG (though I'll admit MG made a few pretty nice cars too).