I tend to read everything I can. Of course, on Main, the decision to close, or delete, or flag, can often be made without reading all the content on the post. I would definitely be less likely to do that on Meta.
I think Sam's edits removed my attribution to him. :-)
Oh, no. I actually removed it myself, because I rewrote the logic differently from his script, and I didn't want to confuse myself later thinking it was copied from him.
I'm glad to see your attribution in the initial comments though. Honestly, does anyone truly write anything non-trivial entirely from scratch any more?
@CodyGray Dang, the timestamps are identical on the closure and deletion of that post. I'd never noticed that (or cared to look). I've just assumed there's been a 2-3 second lag between the actions.
Ideally, one would pay it forward by submitting a PR to the original project. That's hard of course, and assumes the original project is being maintained.
I need to start getting more actively involved in Gits and stuff. For some time, both my boss and I were strongly against making my code open source; but I'm changing my mind. Some of it (science stuff) should be but other parts (custom GUIs) I feel are 'ours alone'.
@cigien That's a lot harder. You have to follow the coding standards of the original project, which is a much higher burden than simply submitting what you did in your own fork.
Sure. There are two different issues here. Forking others' work and putting my own on an open repo.
My current main project, for example, is 90%+ my original code (the rest taken/adapted from the Numerical Recipes book). That would make me the "master" of any repo I set up.
And most of the code I've stolenborrowedadapted came from sources far more obscure than GitHub.
One of my pet peeves is code emanating from research labs (in academic institutions) not being open source. I feel there should be a blanket policy requiring it. I've brought this up seriously in a number of meetings, and I've basically been told that I'm being too idealistic. The CS depts are generally more open to the idea, but there's a lot of resistance from the Bio labs.
But I would check with the relevant folks in the Uni before publishing any code that's clearly from Numerical Recipes. (But the version of the book I bought came with a CD with the code on it - not sure what that means, though.)
Wait, no, never mind. If you look at the detailed page, it says that's not legit for commercial use.
That's a very confusing and misleading "Generally yes" statement.
@cigien I don't understand why there would be resistance. These labs publish their work; why not also publish their code? Frankly, for any paper you publish, the source code should be published along with it in order to make the work legitimately reproducible.
Even in cases where your lab profits off of selling specialized equipment (as may be true in Adrian's case?), your customers should come from the fact that you provide a fully tested, verified, integrated package and technical support. Not from the fact that there's no other way to get/do it.
@CodyGray We ended up publishing the header files for the core library and compiled objects libraries for most major platforms. Adding that we would happily collaborate to make code for other systems/compilers/platforms.
@CodyGray That's my take on it. The response has been that it's not practical (my understanding is that there are funding issues, and other financial matters at stake). I can guarantee that Unis in general don't enforce that source code be shared at all. My Uni definitely doesn't.
All you'll do is lead people astray. They'll try to use it, thinking that they have the same version or "close enough" of the compiler, and find out that... it doesn't work.
@cigien Where are the funding issues? Does it cost money to publish code?
Maybe it costs time, except... how are you writing it in the first place? Aren't you using version control?
@CodyGray No, but the idea is that it cost money to generate the code in the first place, and so sharing it freely may not be the best idea. If you think there are issues with this argument, join the club. I'll send you a link, and you can zoom-bomb the next meeting where we discuss this ;)
This is my soapbox, by the way. Anyone who receives publicly funded research grants should make all of their research available to that same public who funded it.
@CodyGray I've always made it clear, in any publication (and in the software documentation) that we are happy to provide full access to the source code, on request. We're just not happy to have it hanging around on the InterWeb for any old hacker to wreck.
GitHub may even have an arrangement with universities, now that it's Microsoft owned. (We get, in theory, VS Enterprise and all the what-nots for free.)
M/S are quite clever when it comes to universities. Like drug-pushers. Give their stuff to the students for free, then they'll need to pay to continue using it when they start earning the big bucks.
I don't do anything very sophisticated with the Git tools. I push every now and then; I can clone my work (easily) when I set up a new development machine. And I can roll back when I screw up big-time style.