Somebody recently requested an answer from me to do solve a problem in C++
(which did turn out to be homework) on SO, so instead of answering it, I
gave a trivial four line (and much easier to read) solution in Julia ;-)
(and said that was an example of why I no longer wanted to program in
In this particular case, I let the students collaborate and use outside
resources as long as they cited the sources. But asking for the answer on
Julia-users was not exactly what I had in mind...
Sent from my iPad
> On 17 May 2016, at 12:27 AM, Tamas Papp wrote:
>
> Many
Many computer language mailing lists/forums have some policy about
homework problems. Even though most universities (and, in addition, some
specific courses) also have rules for proper academic conduct which
should preclude questions like the OP, perhaps guidelines about homework
problems should
Lol.
On Monday, May 16, 2016 at 12:21:49 AM UTC-7, Sheehan Olver wrote:
>
> Especially when it's a discussion board that the lecturer posts
> regularly...
>
> On Sunday, May 15, 2016 at 10:56:14 PM UTC+10, Stefan Karpinski wrote:
>>
>> This appears to be a homework question. Just as on
Especially when it's a discussion board that the lecturer posts regularly...
On Sunday, May 15, 2016 at 10:56:14 PM UTC+10, Stefan Karpinski wrote:
>
> This appears to be a homework question. Just as on StackOverflow, it's not
> ok to ask people to do homework problems for you on julia-users.
>
This appears to be a homework question. Just as on StackOverflow, it's not
ok to ask people to do homework problems for you on julia-users.
On Sun, May 15, 2016 at 7:07 AM, Rafiul Nakib
wrote:
> Can anyone please help me on this?
>
Can anyone please help me on this?