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12:02 AM
If we suppose that each test function is called for each change of the edit, the function can return either 1 (for a bad change) or 0 (for a good/neutral change). The number that is returned is then multiplied by the function's weight, and that is added to the total number of problems. Once the total is calculated, it is divided by the total number of changes to come up with a percentage of bad changes.
Over a certain threshold, that will be reported in the room. If it gets positive feedback, each function's weight will go up. Take an example. A function returns 1 for only one edit, but it has a weight of 1.5. If the total number of problems detected is 3, that's 50% from that test. Therefore, it gets half of the positive feedback. If that test has been used 9 times before, it's weight will therefore increase by 0.5/10 = 0.05.
The problem, though, is that I'm not sure how to know when to affect the scores negatively. For example, the room might say to send a message in when 35% of the edit is bad. If the feedback is that it's an okay edit, should that really affect the weights? If it's 15%, 85%, ... at what point does it affect the weights?
And should an 80% problem false positive affect the weights as much as a 30%? Probably not; what should I do?
 
 
2 hours later…
1:38 AM
By the way, the code for the project is here.
 
1:56 AM
I got 78 WPM on Dvorak. My new record.
 
 
2 hours later…
4:01 AM
 
 
3 hours later…
6:45 AM
Hello.
@zondo According to Microsoft's DNA that building sucking things is a part of it, my Windows 10 has corrupted and it was stuck in there. no fixes were working
well I deleted some files and it damaged. damaging it was my fault but there had to be a fix for it. at last I reinstalled it and lost all of my apps.
 

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