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Revision history for BP830

Displaying 1-25 of 28 results found. page 1 2
     Edits shown per page: 25.
BP830 on 2022-12-29 21:18:56 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
COMMENTS

Left: the left hand side is enough to communicate the answer; the left pattern can be seen without the counterexamples on the right.

Right: the right hand side is enough to communicate the answer; the right pattern can be seen without counterexamples on the left.

Flipping a BP will switch its sorting.

The following is taken from the comments on page BP513 (keyword @left-narrow):

Call a pattern "narrow" if it is likely to be noticed in a collection of examples, without any counterexamples provided.

A collection of triangles will be recognized as such; "triangles" is a narrow pattern. A collection of non-triangular shapes will just be seen as "shapes"; "not triangles" is not narrow.

Narrow patterns tend to be phrased positively ("is [property]"), while non-narrow patterns opposite narrow patterns tend to be phrased negatively ("is not [property]").

CROSSREFS

See keywords @left-narrow and @right-narrow.

BP830 on 2021-02-09 19:33:36 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
COMMENTS

Left: the left hand side is enough to communicate the answer; the left pattern can be seen without the counterexamples on the right.

Right: the right hand side is enough to communicate the answer; the right pattern can be seen without counterexamples on the left.

Flipping a BP will switch its sorting.

The following is taken from the comments on page BP513 (keyword "left-narrow"):

Call a pattern "narrow" if it is likely to be noticed in a collection of examples, without any counterexamples provided.

A collection of triangles will be recognized as such; "triangles" is a narrow pattern. A collection of non-triangular shapes will just be seen as "shapes"; "not triangles" is not narrow.

Narrow patterns tend to be phrased positively ("is [property]"), while non-narrow patterns opposite narrow patterns tend to be phrased negatively ("is not [property]").

BP830 on 2021-02-09 19:32:39 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
COMMENTS

Left: the left hand side is enough to communicate the answer; the left pattern can be seen without the counterexamples on the right.

Right: the right hand side is enough to communicate the answer; the right pattern can be seen without counterexamples on the left.

Call a pattern "narrow" if it is likely to be noticed in a collection of examples, without any counterexamples provided.

A collection of triangles will be recognized as such; "triangles" is a narrow pattern. A collection of non-triangular shapes will just be seen as "shapes"; "not triangles" is not narrow.

Narrow patterns tend to be phrased positively ("is [property]"), while non-narrow patterns opposite narrow patterns tend to be phrased negatively ("is not [property]").

Flipping a BP will switch its sorting.

BP830 on 2021-02-09 19:32:12 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
COMMENTS

Call a pattern "narrow" if it is likely to be noticed in a collection of examples, without any counterexamples provided.

A collection of triangles will be recognized as such; "triangles" is a narrow pattern. A collection of non-triangular shapes will just be seen as "shapes"; "not triangles" is not narrow.

Narrow patterns tend to be phrased positively ("is [property]"), while non-narrow patterns opposite narrow patterns tend to be phrased negatively ("is not [property]").

Left: the left hand side is enough to communicate the answer; the left pattern can be seen without the counterexamples on the right.

Right: the right hand side is enough to communicate the answer; the right pattern can be seen without counterexamples on the left.

Flipping a BP will switch its sorting.

BP830 on 2021-02-09 19:31:17 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
COMMENTS

Call a pattern "narrow" if it is likely to be noticed in a large collection of examples, without any counterexamples provided.

A collection of triangles will be recognized as such; "triangles" is a narrow pattern. A collection of non-triangular shapes will just be seen as "shapes"; "not triangles" is not narrow.

Narrow patterns tend to be phrased positively ("is [property]"), while non-narrow patterns opposite narrow patterns tend to be phrased negatively ("is not [property]").

Left: the left hand side is enough to communicate the answer; the left pattern can be seen without the counterexamples on the right.

Right: the right hand side is enough to communicate the answer; the right pattern can be seen without counterexamples on the left.

Flipping a BP will switch its sorting.

BP830 on 2021-02-09 19:30:01 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
NAME

Image of a Bongard Problem with left side a "positive" property and right side the "negative" property versus vice versa.

BP830 on 2021-02-09 19:28:38 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
COMMENTS

Left: the left hand side is enough to communicate the answer; the left pattern can be seen without the counterexamples on the right.

Right: the right hand side is enough to communicate the answer; the right pattern can be seen without counterexamples on the left.

Flipping a BP will switch its sorting.

BP830 on 2021-02-09 19:27:25 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
COMMENTS

Flipping a BP will switch its sorting.

BP830 on 2021-02-09 19:26:51 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
CROSSREFS

See keyword "left-narrow" left-BP513 and keyword "right-narrow" left-BP514.

BP830 on 2020-07-26 20:57:37 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
NAME

Image of a Bongard Problem with left side "narrow" and right side not "narrow" versus vice versa.

EXAMPLE

BP830 on 2020-07-26 20:52:26 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
NAME

Images of Bongard Problems with left side "narrow" and right side not "narrow" versus vice versa.

COMMENTS

Switching the sides of an example will switch its sorting.

CROSSREFS

See BP513 and BP514.

AUTHOR

Aaron David Fairbanks

+DATA

 

EX6837
   

EX6838
   

EX6839
   

EX6840
   

EX6841
   

EX6842
 

-DATA

 

EX6843
   

EX6844
   

EX6845
   

EX6846
   

EX6847
   

EX6848
 

BP830 on 2020-07-25 02:25:24 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
NAME

COMMENTS

REFERENCE

CROSSREFS

EXAMPLE

AUTHOR

REMOVE

     

BP830 on 2020-07-06 13:38:56 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
REMOVE

  

BP830 on 2020-07-06 13:34:05 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
+DATA

  

BP830 on 2020-07-06 07:22:46 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
NAME

COMMENTS

REFERENCE

CROSSREFS

EXAMPLE

AUTHOR

REMOVE

  

BP830 on 2020-07-06 01:34:48 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
+DATA

  

BP830 on 2020-07-06 01:34:39 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
REMOVE

  

BP830 on 2020-07-06 01:34:33 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
+DATA

  

BP830 on 2020-07-06 01:23:20 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
NAME

Bongard Problems with "world" three non-crossing line segments in 2D space vs. other Bongard Problems.

COMMENTS

EXAMPLE

AUTHOR

Aaron David Fairbanks

+DATA

  

BP830 on 2020-07-06 01:22:15 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
REMOVE

  


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