I commented on this question, and, since the OP asked me, I gave him an answer.
The code I used comes from a library I made, years ago. I translated it to VB.NET (from C#), prepared, and posted it. All in, say, 10 minutes.
Then, out of the blue, some guy accused me of "stealing" someone else's work, because the names of the flags and enumerator list I posted were identical to those he found in PInvoke and in another post here.
I tried to explain that those are not just names, but the names, those you can find in Shlwapi.h
and of course in MSDN. That's why everyone is using them.
That's the standard naming convention for those values (and not only those) when used in C# or VB.NET.
He also mentioned that the name of a function was identical. AssocQueryString
? That's the name in Shlwapi.dll library. He clearly didn't know much about it, said something else, downvoted both question and answer and disappeared.
However, this event, per se, is not really important. (Even though I'd like to know your opinion on this.)
I wrote here because this made me think. I know the abstract of "what should be considered plagiarism", so I'm more interested in what is considered or perceived as such here.
Given that I've been writing here for more or less a month, I don't have a good grasp of the community culture and mood yet.
So I took my tour. I read the FAQ on this. Well, those are the standard, basic rules you can find anywhere else (yes, right...). I found some (apparently plagiarized) cats explaining the accepted behavior.
Other posts are more related to What should be done with users found guilty of plagiarism?. The opinions on the matter, well, they show controversial feelings (and when they don't).
I wrote "Guidelines", but in truth what I care about is some experienced advice.
Also, in this post I found a reference to the moderators:
...moderators are entrusted to reach a decision that benefits the site...
In a case like this, what is the preferred behavior and/or outcome?
- Moderators take care of this, there's nothing else to be done.
- Address/Ask a moderator (how?) (to what end?).
- It's a personal matter. Deal with it in chat or suck it up.
- That is one post, among millions, nobody cares.
- (...)
I'm asking this out of respect for what people do here, some on a daily basis.
Also, having the suspect of being seen as some sort of pariah for reasons I may not understand, is unpleasant. If my question is so "green" that I deserve a kick in the teeth, that's fine, I can take it.