Have you ever seen an answer posted not long after you posted one, and are sure that the other answerer only copied your work, maybe changed a variable name here and there?
How should I act if I discover a user plagiarizing fellow users' posts? What if I find someone plagiarizing external resources without attribution?
See also: Users are calling me a plagiarist. What do I do?
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@AbdurRehmanKhan You don't get two dictionaries in the list, you just get two references to a single dictionary, the dictionary that's named x inside gen.
@kauray That won't find the 222 in [[3,4], [2], [[222]]], though. If you need to find items in arbitrarily nested lists, then you should recursively search through the sublists. You can see some examples of that sort of thing here: stackoverflow.com/q/11377208/4014959 In Python 3, you can simplify this using yield from. I have some more complicated examples of working with nested lists & dicts here stackoverflow.com/a/41778581/4014959 & in the other links there.
@AnnZen OTOH, I've also seen two people independently post virtually the same chunk of code. So it's not always easy to be confident that something is plagiarism.
@PaulMcG I think __del__ warnings are fine for this. While I often use PyPy (and it's great that PyParsing supports it) I usually develop using CPython, so __del__ warnings would be prompt. Even if they are not exact (PyPy, Shell, ...), it makes at least some noise that points at the problem.
The alternative would be some with pp.Forward() as .... That could actually be nice for usability and readability, but I'm not sure whether reworking the public API like that is worth it. There are probably some other things that might need streamlining at the same time (flattening of | operator chains, etc.).
Huh, I've just been shown an advert for a Hans Zimmer masterclass on writing film scores. Despite having no creative ability when it comes to music, I imagine that would be really interesting.
Isn't the whole point of the film that she's trying to get over the issue of the screaming lambs? She'd have been better sitting at home watching Netflix if she only needed to keep the silence she'd already achieved (based on that translation of the title)
The problem is that there's no good word for alien. There's a word that means foreigner (which I know alien covers), but the word sounds...alien. There's another word that means "space creature" which also sounds weird.
Given the prevalence of the "alien" concept (not just the film franchise but also things like District 9 (off the top of my head)) in Western film, I'm surprised the word hasn't just been adopted into the language
Or Independence Day, Men in Black etc. It's a sprawling theme
Then again, I have little-to-no concept of how languages work. Sometimes I struggle to English
It's interesting because I use terms with French origins like "au fait" and "faux pas", for which I'd only find a clumsy way to express in English. Or "schadenfreude", actually. But these have existed for a long time for me; I'm not sure how I'd feel if we started trying to import new words
There are actually concepts that I find easier to describe in English. Like "straightforward". But I can only say that to people who don't look at me weird for putting English words in a Hungarian sentence.
>>> inspect.Signature(Exception)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3.8/inspect.py", line 2774, in __init__
for idx, param in enumerate(parameters):
TypeError: 'type' object is not iterable
of course the attitude is similar, and it was sang by the very nice alto of a Hungarian actress, probably quite similar to the original (I'll have to give it a listen sometime)
"So come and melt into us." sounds like something a cult might use in their advertising pamphlet. "Because life, life rules" suffers from "living one's best life" not existing at the time of translation, I guess
People not using url_for in Flask is starting to feel similar to SQL Injection to me. Not in terms of security, but in terms of brokenness of the XY attempts
@MisterMiyagi I think I've worked out a decent solution. When a Forward is created, I capture the calling frame. If the Forward expression gets properly defined later with <<= or <<, then I get rid of it. At __del__ time, if the calling frame is still there, then I can highlight that line and say a warning like "Hey! you never properly defined this Forward() - did you later define it using '=' when you should have used '<<='?"
@AndrasDeak 2500 instances per increment. The y-axis shows 50, 100, 150...so multiple 2500 by 150 and that's how many cabbages have been said. I forgot to add "since..." so it's some what unclear, but it's irrelevant to the data I was finding
@AaronHall Do you want the data sheet or the code?
@AnnZen I think Paul is just in the same boat as I was when reading your post. Generally, we'll interpret those "observations" (for want of a better word) as either a neat trick you've found or something you want clarification on.
@roganjosh Of course not. Just relax, move a tad closer to the window, and assume a neutral face expression for 1 second. Remove your glasses and hat, in case you are wearing any.
Ah. I'll look pensive and stare into the middle distance. And no, no disguise today
@AnnZen it's a misunderstanding. The objective view: someone posts an unusual code snippet in the room, and says that they are not confused about why it works. People are accustomed to people posting snippets when they're either a) confused how they work (which you stated you weren't) or b) believe they've found a cool trick. Given that it's likely to be (b) in this case, Paul was concerned you'd pass the observation on
@toonarmycaptain Yes, I'm sure. Checking all the doors are locked 5 times is part of my daily exercise routine. Pulling down the blackout blinds is just part of doing my stretches
It's all normal stuff. Completely normal.... normal. You're writing an article about how abnormal I am, aren't you?!
@roganjosh There's a bimetallic number in two tone yellow uranium to block radio waves, and green copper to prevent infection with ideas. Get it in time for your summer bunker wear.
@toonarmycaptain Well, I do have a lot of followers that expect me to be looking my best. I can't live my best life if I don't have the right kit and two-tone really is in this year
Saber-tooth mammoths. They were such a blight on social advancement, writing about them was forbidden after Bob vs. Rhadamanthus. I don't need to revisit the details of that case; this is a child-friendly forum
TIL: when someone doesn't format their code in a question, and there's already a proposed edit fixing it, always click the "Improve Edit" button, never "Approve". Because now I can't edit it any more, and it's sitting in the review queue for who knows how long...