Answer
As mentioned, our definition of plagiarism may not match that of any learning institution you attend. That said, I'll take a dictionary definition and give my thoughts based on that.
OED defines plagiarism as:
The action or practice of taking someone else's work, idea, etc., and
passing it off as one's own; literary theft.
Merriam-Webster gives these definitions:
to steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as one's own :
use (another's production) without crediting the source
to commit literary theft : present as new and original an idea or
product derived from an existing source
So, I will gauge your cases against these definitions, highlighting important parts as I go.
Case 1: I did not post the exact same problem I'm facing; instead, I
have simplified my issue, asking for the concept. Someone answers
(with or without an example) and I use their answer in my
work/project/school (without citing the source).
Plagiarism. You have used their work without citing the source. There's nothing in those definitions that say that the work must be copied word for word, or that it needs to meet the exact problem solved.
At its core:
- you used someone else's work
- you didn't credit that person
- thus, you have plagiarised
Case 2: I used the answer in my work/project/school (no citing).
Plagiarism. For the exact same reasons as above.
Case 3: I studied the answer but still used the same code (maybe
slightly modified) in my work/project/school. (Why type your own when
someone already does it? And the answer is better than yours.)
Plagiarism. For the exact same reasons as above; you have used someone else's work and you haven't explicitly credited them for it.
Case 4: I did extra research while the answer hadn't arrived yet
(looking at documentation, other SO answers, other forums). Then,
someone answers, I take the answer and modify it with code I found
during the research.
Plagiarism. For the exact same reasons as above; you have used someone else's work, in whole or in part, and you still haven't explicitly credited them for it.
Further remarks
I'd like to take a moment to look at some of your remarks in your question.
I know that it would be more polite to give attribution but I'm sure most users do not do that.
Firstly, as has already been answered, this has absolutely nothing to do with politeness, at all.
I'm not sure if English if your first language (or if you're proficient otherwise) so I'll gently explain that, rather than about politeness, this is about honesty, and beyond that, about integrity. These are far more important with much further reaching consequences for you than mere politeness.
Secondly, if the highest standard you set for yourself is the standard of others, if the level at which you want to operate merely reflects that of your peers, then you clearly don't aspire to be much. A conscientious person, whether you are one or not I don't know, should hold themselves to the highest standards.
What you're doing by comparing yourself to others like this is rationalising your own substandard academic conduct. This is obvious, because maybe other people do not plagiarise, yet you don't compare yourself to these people. In my academic experience, cheaters are in the minority.
In any case it should not matter to you what others do, it should only matter what you do.
Why type your own when someone already does it? And the answer is better than yours.
If you don't already know the answer to this (and I think you do) then you fundamentally don't understand the purpose of education.
Plagiarising someone else's work demonstrates that they understand the problem and can develop a solution. Presenting your own work demonstrates that you understand the problem and can develop a solution.
When you cheat academically, usually you're only cheating yourself. Assignments and homework are designed not only to test your knowledge, but to highlight knowledge gaps. That's why people do exercises; to stress their knowledge and skills and to identify where they need help and assistance.
If you cheat yourself into a position that you haven't earned, you're potentially not only going to create trouble for yourself, but others too. You can very quickly become a dead weight to a team of capable people, who thought you were equally capable but later find out that you're not.
Any good teacher would rather spend their own time helping tutor a struggling student, than face them after some sort of disciplinary committee.
I would like to know what others think about them.
Cheating is sad. The cases you outline are disappointing to read.
You may find this helpful; this is an example of a university's policy on what it considers that plagiarism is: https://www.mtsu.edu/graduate/pdf/Plagiarism.pdf