I've read When is using an other poster's content plagiarism and Copy-pasting the contents of another answer to the same question — with attribution. While they address the ideas of plagiarism, my question involves a slightly different case.
See my answer to this question -Index 0 Requested with a size of 0 Error in SQLITE DB and compare it to the 'unedited' version of the accepted answer. You'll notice a striking similarity in the code block that was used. Sure, 95% of the code was from the OP's code, but because of the comment I added to one of my new lines it's very clear that the code was taken straight from my answer and not the OP's.
Just so we're clear:
I am admittedly not particularly proud of this answer nor am I wondering why it wasn't marked as the accepted answer. I didn't put more than 5 minutes into it and to be honest I stopped working on it as soon as I saw that someone else had decided to use it as their own and expand upon it. And yes, only 1 line of code shows that his answer was clearly copy-pasted from mine, but as a wise man named Bob from Bob's Burgers recently said, "It's about the principle of the thing!".
In this case it made sense to just accept that this was a rare and trivial case but in the future if someone runs into a similar issue, what's the best course of action to take if someone initially copies your answer and then changes it through subsequent edits? Or better yet, is there anything to do?
As suggested in one of the posts I mentioned in the beginning, rolling back an edit doesn't apply because it only began as mostly a copy-paste job (not to mention I don't have the privileges to work that kind of magic on my own).
Also, I've seen this quite often where one answer will build off another (which makes sense IF you've got something else to add that the first answer missed) the only common factor that's missing in my case is no mention of attribution.
Thanks for your time!
myDBHelper
and he added anif
. I doubt attribution for the closing and comment is needed.db = myDBHelper.getWritableDatabase();
in their "unedited version", so your argument is kind of pointless in this case. But I can understand the frustration of providing an answer and feeling as though you have been pipped to the post, but that's life on SO I'm afraid.CursorIndexOutOfBoundsException
questions out there with similar answers). One thing I would say is just wait untill you have 2K rep and roll-back the other person's answer to the original version then update yours. ;)