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Revision history for BP1003

Displaying 1-25 of 55 results found. page 1 2 3
     Edits shown per page: 25.
BP1003 on 2024-09-18 05:15:42 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
NAME

The combined collection obeys the same rule as the sub-collections vs. not so.

BP1003 on 2021-12-13 19:04:18 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
REMOVE

 

EX9291
 

BP1003 on 2021-12-13 06:52:47 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
NAME

The combined collection fits the same rule as the sub-collections vs. not so.

BP1003 on 2021-12-13 06:45:13 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
+DATA

 

EX9562
 

BP1003 on 2021-12-13 05:41:01 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
+DATA

 

EX9561
 

REMOVE

 

EX9560
 

BP1003 on 2021-12-13 05:25:19 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
+DATA

 

EX9560
 

BP1003 on 2021-12-13 05:24:30 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
REMOVE

 

EX9557
 

BP1003 on 2021-12-13 03:36:23 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
+DATA

 

EX9291
 

BP1003 on 2021-12-13 03:34:18 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
+DATA

 

EX9559
 

REMOVE

 

EX9138
 

BP1003 on 2021-12-13 02:56:14 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
-DATA

 

EX9558
 

BP1003 on 2021-12-13 02:16:07 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
+DATA

 

EX9557
 

BP1003 on 2021-12-09 06:26:02 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
CROSSREFS

Contrast BP999, which is very similar. There, when considering the whole picture, the collections are to be treated as individual objects; here, when considering the whole picture, the collections are to be combined into one big collection. A picture showing (for example) an odd number of even-numbered groups would be sorted differently by these two BPs.

Also contrast BP1004, which is about a collection of plain objects obeying the same rule as all the objects (instead of a collection of [collections of objects] obeying the same rule as all the [collections of objects]).

See BP1006 for the version with only number-based properties. All panels in that Bongard Problem fit the same way in this Bongard Problem as well.

BP1003 on 2021-12-09 06:24:36 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
CROSSREFS

Contrast BP999, which is very similar. There, when considering the whole picture, the collections are to be treated as individual objects; here, when considering the whole picture, the collections are to be combined into one big collection. A picture showing (for example) an odd number of even-numbered groups would be sorted differently by these two BPs.

Also contrast BP1004, which is about a collection of plain objects obeying the same rule as all the objects (instead of a collection of [collections of objects] obeying the same rule as all the [collections of objects]).

See BP1006 for the version with only number-based properties. All examples in that Bongard Problem fit the same way in this Bongard Problem as well.

BP1003 on 2021-12-09 06:23:53 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
CROSSREFS

Contrast BP999, which is very similar. There, when considering the whole picture, the collections are to be treated as individual objects; here, when considering the whole picture, the collections are to be combined into one big collection. A picture showing (for example) an odd number of even-numbered groups would be sorted differently by these two BPs.

Also contrast BP1004, which is about a collection of plain objects obeying the same rule as all the objects (instead of a collection of [collections of objects] obeying the same rule as all the [collections of objects]).

See BP1006 for the version with only number-related properties. All examples in that Bongard Problem fit the same way in this Bongard Problem as well.

BP1003 on 2021-12-09 05:53:29 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
COMMENTS

Since it is most intuitive to imagine spatially squishing together all the collections in the process of combining them into one big collection, avoid rules that involve relative spatial positionings of objects.

BP1003 on 2021-12-09 05:53:09 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
COMMENTS

Since it is intuitive to imagine spatially squishing together all the collections in the process of combining them into one big collection, avoid rules that involve relative spatial positionings of objects.

BP1003 on 2021-12-09 05:52:57 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
COMMENTS

Since it is intuitive to imagine spatially squishing together all the collections in the process of combining them into one big collection, avoid rules that involve relative spatial positioning of objects.

BP1003 on 2021-12-09 05:50:47 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
COMMENTS

Since it is intuitive to imagine squishing together all the collections in order to combine them into one collection, avoid rules that involve relative spatial positioning of objects within collections.

BP1003 on 2021-12-09 05:40:22 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
-DATA

 

EX9503
 

BP1003 on 2021-12-09 04:59:06 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
CROSSREFS

Contrast BP999, which is very similar. There, when considering the whole picture, the collections are to be treated as individual objects; here, when considering the whole picture, the collections are to be combined into one big collection. A picture showing (for example) an odd number of even-numbered groups would be sorted differently by these two BPs.

Also contrast BP1004, where a collection of plain objects obeys the same rule as the objects, instead of a collection of [collections of objects] obeying the same rule as the [collections of objects].

See BP1006 for the version with only number-related properties. All examples in that Bongard Problem fit the same way in this Bongard Problem as well.

BP1003 on 2021-12-09 04:41:07 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
CROSSREFS

Contrast BP999, which is very similar. There, when considering the whole picture, the collections are to be treated as individual objects; here, when considering the whole picture, the collections are to be combined into one big collection. A picture showing (for example) an odd number of even-numbered groups would be sorted differently by these two BPs.

See BP1006 for the version with only number-related properties. All examples in that Bongard Problem fit the same way in this Bongard Problem as well.

BP1003 on 2021-12-09 04:36:43 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
CROSSREFS

Contrast BP999, which is very similar. There, when considering the whole picture, the collections are to be treated as individual objects; here, when considering the whole picture, the collections are to be combined into one big collection.

See BP1006 for the version with only number-related properties. All examples in that Bongard Problem fit the same way in this Bongard Problem as well.

BP1003 on 2021-12-09 04:32:20 by Aaron David Fairbanks                approved
+DATA

 

EX9502
 


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