Skip to main content
Active reading [<https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/programming#Noun> <https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/you're#Contraction>]. Active reading [<https://www.wikihow.com/Use-You%27re-and-Your>].
Source Link
Peter Mortensen
  • 31.6k
  • 4
  • 22
  • 14

As the individual who made the comment:

How would it be plagiarism when I ask questions and try and be receptive to what I am being told and working around suggestions?

It’s not plagiarism. It’s cheating. As a student you should only be using resources approved by a professor. Having someone on Stack Overflow complete a programming assignment is cheating. Hiring someone to complete that same assignment is cheating. My comment was an opinion, from a professional programmer, with 25 years of experience who received multiple relevant college degrees (2 B.S.two B.S and 1 M.Sone M.S).

I don't expect to be given code segments but as a new-ish programmer to C++ I don't exactly know all the quick tricks and libraries that are offered.

Which is the reason you go to the professor or teachers assistant for assistance with the assignment. As someone who received multiple college degrees in Stack Overflow related fields, the professor always provided all necessary information, before expecting you to use that knowledge.

Saying that using this site is plagiarism is almost ironic knowing that during career fairs many corporate programingprogramming teams said they frequented SO asking questions ans scouring posts for answers to complete projects.

I never said it was plagiarism. You indicated you were a student. You indicated your knowledge gap is pretty big. I only suggested you have approved resources that you can use to complete assignments. Outside of an academic environment nobody cares how you complete your work, except perhaps if youryou’re a programmer assigned to create the Android VM, and simply copied and pasted Java VM source code.

Is it the simple act of copying someone else's work that is plagiarism or entirely just using the site to learn more about the coding language I'm working with?

If you don’t indicate your source, absolutely it’s plagiarism.

But of course "unproved" can vary from professor to professor. Using the site to build my knowledge is like saying you cant read the manual. Almost everything everyone says here in terms of code was all created in an open-source platform.

I simply replied with a comment suggesting you have resources you can use as a response to a complaint about the communitiescommunity's reception to your questions. I can’t quote what you said because your previous question was deleted.

If so that would be like barring me off from using a reference guide or book to look for ways to the solution.

There probably isn’t a professor anywhere that wouldn’t allow you to use official documentation to complete an assignment. Since the use of that documentation by itself, typically cannot complete your assignment, it takes knowledge from their lectures to complete it.

Of course my entire comment, is based on the fact, asking a question that is obviously an academic programming assignment isn’t helpful to the community in my opinion.

As the individual who made the comment:

How would it be plagiarism when I ask questions and try and be receptive to what I am being told and working around suggestions?

It’s not plagiarism. It’s cheating. As a student you should only be using resources approved by a professor. Having someone on Stack Overflow complete a programming assignment is cheating. Hiring someone to complete that same assignment is cheating. My comment was an opinion, from a professional programmer, with 25 years of experience who received multiple relevant college degrees (2 B.S. and 1 M.S).

I don't expect to be given code segments but as a new-ish programmer to C++ I don't exactly know all the quick tricks and libraries that are offered.

Which is the reason you go to the professor or teachers assistant for assistance with the assignment. As someone who received multiple college degrees in Stack Overflow related fields, the professor always provided all necessary information, before expecting you to use that knowledge.

Saying that using this site is plagiarism is almost ironic knowing that during career fairs many corporate programing teams said they frequented SO asking questions ans scouring posts for answers to complete projects.

I never said it was plagiarism. You indicated you were a student. You indicated your knowledge gap is pretty big. I only suggested you have approved resources that you can use to complete assignments. Outside of an academic environment nobody cares how you complete your work, except perhaps if your a programmer assigned to create the Android VM, and simply copied and pasted Java VM source code.

Is it the simple act of copying someone else's work that is plagiarism or entirely just using the site to learn more about the coding language I'm working with?

If you don’t indicate your source absolutely it’s plagiarism.

But of course "unproved" can vary from professor to professor. Using the site to build my knowledge is like saying you cant read the manual. Almost everything everyone says here in terms of code was all created in an open-source platform.

I simply replied with a comment suggesting you have resources you can use as a response to a complaint about the communities reception to your questions. I can’t quote what you said because your previous question was deleted.

If so that would be like barring me off from using a reference guide or book to look for ways to the solution.

There probably isn’t a professor anywhere that wouldn’t allow you to use official documentation to complete an assignment. Since the use of that documentation by itself, typically cannot complete your assignment, it takes knowledge from their lectures to complete it.

Of course my entire comment, is based on the fact, asking a question that is obviously an academic programming assignment isn’t helpful to the community in my opinion.

As the individual who made the comment:

How would it be plagiarism when I ask questions and try and be receptive to what I am being told and working around suggestions?

It’s not plagiarism. It’s cheating. As a student you should only be using resources approved by a professor. Having someone on Stack Overflow complete a programming assignment is cheating. Hiring someone to complete that same assignment is cheating. My comment was an opinion, from a professional programmer, with 25 years of experience who received multiple relevant college degrees (two B.S and one M.S).

I don't expect to be given code segments but as a new-ish programmer to C++ I don't exactly know all the quick tricks and libraries that are offered.

Which is the reason you go to the professor or teachers assistant for assistance with the assignment. As someone who received multiple college degrees in Stack Overflow related fields, the professor always provided all necessary information, before expecting you to use that knowledge.

Saying that using this site is plagiarism is almost ironic knowing that during career fairs many corporate programming teams said they frequented SO asking questions ans scouring posts for answers to complete projects.

I never said it was plagiarism. You indicated you were a student. You indicated your knowledge gap is pretty big. I only suggested you have approved resources that you can use to complete assignments. Outside of an academic environment nobody cares how you complete your work, except perhaps if you’re a programmer assigned to create the Android VM, and simply copied and pasted Java VM source code.

Is it the simple act of copying someone else's work that is plagiarism or entirely just using the site to learn more about the coding language I'm working with?

If you don’t indicate your source, absolutely it’s plagiarism.

But of course "unproved" can vary from professor to professor. Using the site to build my knowledge is like saying you cant read the manual. Almost everything everyone says here in terms of code was all created in an open-source platform.

I simply replied with a comment suggesting you have resources you can use as a response to a complaint about the community's reception to your questions. I can’t quote what you said because your previous question was deleted.

If so that would be like barring me off from using a reference guide or book to look for ways to the solution.

There probably isn’t a professor anywhere that wouldn’t allow you to use official documentation to complete an assignment. Since the use of that documentation by itself, typically cannot complete your assignment, it takes knowledge from their lectures to complete it.

Of course my entire comment, is based on the fact, asking a question that is obviously an academic programming assignment isn’t helpful to the community in my opinion.

added 226 characters in body
Source Link
Security Hound
  • 2.6k
  • 2
  • 17
  • 11

As the individual who made the comment:

How would it be plagiarism when I ask questions and try and be receptive to what I am being told and working around suggestions?

It’s not plagiarism. It’s cheating. As a student you should only be using resources approved by a professor. Having someone on Stack Overflow complete a programming assignment is cheating. Hiring someone to complete that same assignment is cheating. My comment was an opinion, from a professional programmer, with 25 years of experience who received multiple relevant college degrees (2 B.S. and 1 M.S).

I don't expect to be given code segments but as a new-ish programmer to C++ I don't exactly know all the quick tricks and libraries that are offered.

Which is the reason you go to the professor or teachers assistant for assistance with the assignment. As someone who received multiple college degrees in Stack Overflow related fields, the professor always provided all necessary information, before expecting you to use that knowledge.

Saying that using this site is plagiarism is almost ironic knowing that during career fairs many corporate programing teams said they frequented SO asking questions ans scouring posts for answers to complete projects.

I never said it was plagiarism. You indicated you were a student. You indicated your knowledge gap is pretty big. I only suggested you have approved resources that you can use to complete assignments. Outside of an academic environment nobody cares how you complete your work, except perhaps if your a programmer assigned to create the Android VM, and simply copied and pasted Java VM source code.

Is it the simple act of copying someone else's work that is plagiarism or entirely just using the site to learn more about the coding language I'm working with?

If you don’t indicate your source absolutely it’s plagiarism.

But of course "unproved" can vary from professor to professor. Using the site to build my knowledge is like saying you cant read the manual. Almost everything everyone says here in terms of code was all created in an open-source platform.

I simply replied with a comment suggesting you have resources you can use as a response to a complaint about the communities reception to your questions. I can’t quote what you said because your previous question was deleted.

If so that would be like barring me off from using a reference guide or book to look for ways to the solution.

There probably isn’t a professor anywhere that wouldn’t allow you to use official documentation to complete an assignment. Since the use of that documentation by itself, typically cannot complete your assignment, it takes knowledge from their lectures to complete it.

Of course my entire comment, is based on the fact, asking a question that is obviously an academic programming assignment isn’t helpful to the community in my opinion.

As the individual who made the comment:

How would it be plagiarism when I ask questions and try and be receptive to what I am being told and working around suggestions?

It’s not plagiarism. It’s cheating. As a student you should only be using resources approved by a professor. Having someone on Stack Overflow complete a programming assignment is cheating. Hiring someone to complete that same assignment is cheating. My comment was an opinion, from a professional programmer, with 25 years of experience who received multiple relevant college degrees (2 B.S. and 1 M.S).

I don't expect to be given code segments but as a new-ish programmer to C++ I don't exactly know all the quick tricks and libraries that are offered.

Which is the reason you go to the professor or teachers assistant for assistance with the assignment. As someone who received multiple college degrees in Stack Overflow related fields, the professor always provided all necessary information, before expecting you to use that knowledge.

Saying that using this site is plagiarism is almost ironic knowing that during career fairs many corporate programing teams said they frequented SO asking questions ans scouring posts for answers to complete projects.

I never said it was plagiarism. You indicated you were a student. You indicated your knowledge gap is pretty big. I only suggested you have approved resources that you can use to complete assignments. Outside of an academic environment nobody cares how you complete your work, except perhaps if your a programmer assigned to create the Android VM, and simply copied and pasted Java VM source code.

Is it the simple act of copying someone else's work that is plagiarism or entirely just using the site to learn more about the coding language I'm working with?

If you don’t indicate your source absolutely it’s plagiarism.

But of course "unproved" can vary from professor to professor. Using the site to build my knowledge is like saying you cant read the manual. Almost everything everyone says here in terms of code was all created in an open-source platform.

I simply replied with a comment suggesting you have resources you can use as a response to a complaint about the communities reception to your questions. I can’t quote what you said because your previous question was deleted.

As the individual who made the comment:

How would it be plagiarism when I ask questions and try and be receptive to what I am being told and working around suggestions?

It’s not plagiarism. It’s cheating. As a student you should only be using resources approved by a professor. Having someone on Stack Overflow complete a programming assignment is cheating. Hiring someone to complete that same assignment is cheating. My comment was an opinion, from a professional programmer, with 25 years of experience who received multiple relevant college degrees (2 B.S. and 1 M.S).

I don't expect to be given code segments but as a new-ish programmer to C++ I don't exactly know all the quick tricks and libraries that are offered.

Which is the reason you go to the professor or teachers assistant for assistance with the assignment. As someone who received multiple college degrees in Stack Overflow related fields, the professor always provided all necessary information, before expecting you to use that knowledge.

Saying that using this site is plagiarism is almost ironic knowing that during career fairs many corporate programing teams said they frequented SO asking questions ans scouring posts for answers to complete projects.

I never said it was plagiarism. You indicated you were a student. You indicated your knowledge gap is pretty big. I only suggested you have approved resources that you can use to complete assignments. Outside of an academic environment nobody cares how you complete your work, except perhaps if your a programmer assigned to create the Android VM, and simply copied and pasted Java VM source code.

Is it the simple act of copying someone else's work that is plagiarism or entirely just using the site to learn more about the coding language I'm working with?

If you don’t indicate your source absolutely it’s plagiarism.

But of course "unproved" can vary from professor to professor. Using the site to build my knowledge is like saying you cant read the manual. Almost everything everyone says here in terms of code was all created in an open-source platform.

I simply replied with a comment suggesting you have resources you can use as a response to a complaint about the communities reception to your questions. I can’t quote what you said because your previous question was deleted.

If so that would be like barring me off from using a reference guide or book to look for ways to the solution.

There probably isn’t a professor anywhere that wouldn’t allow you to use official documentation to complete an assignment. Since the use of that documentation by itself, typically cannot complete your assignment, it takes knowledge from their lectures to complete it.

Of course my entire comment, is based on the fact, asking a question that is obviously an academic programming assignment isn’t helpful to the community in my opinion.

added 226 characters in body
Source Link
Security Hound
  • 2.6k
  • 2
  • 17
  • 11

As the individual who made the comment:

How would it be plagiarism when I ask questions and try and be receptive to what I am being told and working around suggestions?

It’s not plagiarism. It’s cheating. As a student you should only be using resources approved by a professor. Having someone on Stack Overflow complete a programming assignment is cheating. Hiring someone to complete that same assignment is cheating. My comment was an opinion, from a professional programmer, with 25 years of experience who received multiple relevant college degrees (2 B.S. and 1 M.S).

I don't expect to be given code segments but as a new-ish programmer to C++ I don't exactly know all the quick tricks and libraries that are offered.

Which is the reason you go to the professor or teachers assistant for assistance with the assignment. As someone who received multiple college degrees in Stack Overflow related fields, the professor always provided all necessary information, before expecting you to use that knowledge.

Saying that using this site is plagiarism is almost ironic knowing that during career fairs many corporate programing teams said they frequented SO asking questions ans scouring posts for answers to complete projects.

I never said it was plagiarism. You indicated you were a student. You indicated your knowledge gap is pretty big. I only suggested you have approved resources that you can use to complete assignments. Outside of an academic environment nobody cares how you complete your work, except perhaps if your a programmer assigned to create the Android VM, and simply copied and pasted Java VM source code.

Is it the simple act of copying someone else's work that is plagiarism or entirely just using the site to learn more about the coding language I'm working with?

If you don’t indicate your source absolutely it’s plagiarism.

But of course "unproved" can vary from professor to professor. Using the site to build my knowledge is like saying you cant read the manual. Almost everything everyone says here in terms of code was all created in an open-source platform.

I simply replied with a comment suggesting you have resources you can use as a response to a complaint about the communities reception to your questions. I can’t quote what you said because your previous question was deleted.

As the individual who made the comment:

How would it be plagiarism when I ask questions and try and be receptive to what I am being told and working around suggestions?

It’s not plagiarism. It’s cheating. As a student you should only be using resources approved by a professor. Having someone on Stack Overflow complete a programming assignment is cheating. Hiring someone to complete that same assignment is cheating.

I don't expect to be given code segments but as a new-ish programmer to C++ I don't exactly know all the quick tricks and libraries that are offered.

Which is the reason you go to the professor or teachers assistant for assistance with the assignment. As someone who received multiple college degrees in Stack Overflow related fields, the professor always provided all necessary information, before expecting you to use that knowledge.

Saying that using this site is plagiarism is almost ironic knowing that during career fairs many corporate programing teams said they frequented SO asking questions ans scouring posts for answers to complete projects.

I never said it was plagiarism. You indicated you were a student. You indicated your knowledge gap is pretty big. I only suggested you have approved resources that you can use to complete assignments. Outside of an academic environment nobody cares how you complete your work, except perhaps if your a programmer assigned to create the Android VM, and simply copied and pasted Java VM source code.

Is it the simple act of copying someone else's work that is plagiarism or entirely just using the site to learn more about the coding language I'm working with?

If you don’t indicate your source absolutely it’s plagiarism.

But of course "unproved" can vary from professor to professor. Using the site to build my knowledge is like saying you cant read the manual. Almost everything everyone says here in terms of code was all created in an open-source platform.

I simply replied with a comment suggesting you have resources you can use as a response to a complaint about the communities reception to your questions.

As the individual who made the comment:

How would it be plagiarism when I ask questions and try and be receptive to what I am being told and working around suggestions?

It’s not plagiarism. It’s cheating. As a student you should only be using resources approved by a professor. Having someone on Stack Overflow complete a programming assignment is cheating. Hiring someone to complete that same assignment is cheating. My comment was an opinion, from a professional programmer, with 25 years of experience who received multiple relevant college degrees (2 B.S. and 1 M.S).

I don't expect to be given code segments but as a new-ish programmer to C++ I don't exactly know all the quick tricks and libraries that are offered.

Which is the reason you go to the professor or teachers assistant for assistance with the assignment. As someone who received multiple college degrees in Stack Overflow related fields, the professor always provided all necessary information, before expecting you to use that knowledge.

Saying that using this site is plagiarism is almost ironic knowing that during career fairs many corporate programing teams said they frequented SO asking questions ans scouring posts for answers to complete projects.

I never said it was plagiarism. You indicated you were a student. You indicated your knowledge gap is pretty big. I only suggested you have approved resources that you can use to complete assignments. Outside of an academic environment nobody cares how you complete your work, except perhaps if your a programmer assigned to create the Android VM, and simply copied and pasted Java VM source code.

Is it the simple act of copying someone else's work that is plagiarism or entirely just using the site to learn more about the coding language I'm working with?

If you don’t indicate your source absolutely it’s plagiarism.

But of course "unproved" can vary from professor to professor. Using the site to build my knowledge is like saying you cant read the manual. Almost everything everyone says here in terms of code was all created in an open-source platform.

I simply replied with a comment suggesting you have resources you can use as a response to a complaint about the communities reception to your questions. I can’t quote what you said because your previous question was deleted.

Source Link
Security Hound
  • 2.6k
  • 2
  • 17
  • 11
Loading