Revision history for BP963
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Displaying 76-100 of 142 results found.
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Edits shown per page: 25.
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "discontinuous" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "continuous" on the OEBP.
In a "continuous" Bongard Problem, no small change should outright flip an example's sorting. It IS allowed for a small change to make an example sorted slightly more ambiguously.
If a Bongard Problem is shown with imperfect hand drawings ("ignoreimperfections" right-BP913), the keyword "discontinuous" can be applied ignoring this. For instance, a hand-drawn version of BP344 would still be tagged "discontinuous", even though it would show examples wrong by small amounts.
(Note: a BP would only be tagged "ignoreimperfections" in the first place if the underlying idea were such that small changes could switch an example's side (keyword "discontinuous") or make it unsortable.) |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "discontinuous" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "continuous" on the OEBP.
In a "continuous" Bongard Problem, no small change should outright flip an example's sorting. It IS allowed for a small change to make an example sorted slightly more ambiguously.
If a Bongard Problem is shown with imperfect hand drawings ("ignoreimperfections" right-BP913), the keyword "discontinuous" can be applied ignoring this. For instance, a hand-drawn version of BP344 would still be tagged "discontinuous", even though it would show examples wrong by small amounts.
(Note: a BP would only be tagged "ignoreimperfections" in the first place if the underlying idea were such that small changes could switch an example's side (keyword "discontinuous") or render it unsortable.) |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "discontinuous" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "continuous" on the OEBP.
In a "continuous" Bongard Problem, no small change should outright flip an example's sorting. It IS allowed for a small change to make an example sorted slightly more ambiguously.
If a Bongard Problem is shown with imperfect hand drawings ("ignoreimperfections" right-BP913), the keyword "discontinuous" can be applied ignoring this. For instance, a hand-drawn version of BP344 would still be tagged "discontinuous", even though it would show examples wrong by small amounts.
(Note: a BP would only be tagged "ignoreimperfections" in the first place when the underlying idea is such that small changes could switch an example's side (keyword "discontinuous") or render it unsortable.) |
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CROSSREFS
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"Continuous" implies "perfect" (left-BP913).
"Continuous" implies "pixelperfect" (left-BP947).
"Gap" (right-BP964) implies "continuous".
Discontinuous Bongard Problems are often "exact" (left-BP508).
Continuous Bongard Problems tend to either be "fuzzy" (right-BP508) or otherwise either have a "gap" (right-BP964) or be not "allsorted" (right-BP509).
See BP1140, which is about any (perhaps large) additions of detail instead of small changes. |
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CROSSREFS
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"Continuous" implies "perfect" (left-BP913).
"Continuous" implies "pixelperfect" (left-BP947).
"Gap" (right-BP964) implies "continuous".
Discontinuous Bongard Problems are often "exact" (left-BP508).
Continuous Bongard Problems tend to either be "fuzzy" (right-BP508) or otherwise either have a "gap" (right-BP964) or be not "allsorted" (left-BP509).
See BP1140, which is about any (perhaps large) additions of detail instead of small changes. |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "discontinuous" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "continuous" on the OEBP.
In a "continuous" Bongard Problem, no small change should outright flip an example's sorting. It IS allowed for a small change to make an example sorted slightly more ambiguously.
If a Bongard Problem is shown with imperfect hand drawings ("ignoreimperfections" right-BP913), the keyword "discontinuous" can be applied ignoring this. For instance, a hand-drawn version of BP344 would still be tagged "discontinuous", even though it would show examples wrong by small amounts.
(Note: a BP is only tagged "ignoreimperfections" in the first place when the underlying idea is such that small changes could switch an example's side (keyword "discontinuous") or render it unsortable.) |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "discontinuous" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "continuous" on the OEBP.
In a "continuous" Bongard Problem, no small change should outright flip an example's sorting. It IS allowed for a small change to make an example sorted slightly more ambiguously.
If a Bongard Problem is shown with imperfect hand drawings ("ignoreimperfections" right-BP913), the keyword "discontinuous" can be applied ignoring this. For instance, a hand-drawn version of BP344 would still be tagged "discontinuous", even though it would feature some slightly wrong examples.
(Note: a BP is only tagged "ignoreimperfections" in the first place when the underlying idea is such that small changes could switch an example's side (keyword "discontinuous") or render it unsortable.) |
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NAME
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Problems Bongard Problems in which small changes to examples can switch their sorting vs. Problems Bongard Problems in which slightly changed examples remain sorted the same way.
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CROSSREFS
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"Continuous" implies "perfect" (left-BP913).
"Continuous" implies "pixelperfect" (left-BP947).
"Gap" (right-BP964) implies "continuous".
Discontinuous Bongard Problems are often "exact" (left-BP508).
Continuous Bongard Problems tend to either be "fuzzy" (right-BP508) or otherwise have a "gap" (right-BP964).
See BP1140, which is about any (perhaps large) additions of detail instead of small changes. |
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CROSSREFS
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"Continuous" implies "perfect" (left-BP913).
"Continuous" implies "pixelperfect" (left-BP947).
"Gap" (right-BP964) implies "continuous".
Continuous Bongard Problems tend to either be "fuzzy" (right-BP508), or otherwise have a "gap" (right-BP964).
Likewise discontinuous Bongard Problems are often "exact" (left-BP508).
See BP1140, which is about any (perhaps large) additions of detail instead of small changes. |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "discontinuous" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "continuous" on the OEBP.
In a "continuous" Bongard Problem, no small change should outright flip an example's sorting. It IS allowed for a small change to make an example sorted slightly more ambiguously.
If a Bongard Problem is shown with imperfect hand drawings ("ignoreimperfections" right-BP913), the keyword "discontinuous" can be applied ignoring this. For instance, a hand-drawn version of BP344 would still be tagged "discontinuous", even though it would already feature very slightly wrong examples.
(Note: a BP is only tagged "ignoreimperfections" in the first place when the underlying idea is such that small changes could switch an example's side (keyword "discontinuous") or render it unsortable.) |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "discontinuous" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "continuous" on the OEBP.
In a "continuous" Bongard Problem, no small change should outright flip an example's sorting. It IS allowed for a small change to make an example sorted slightly more ambiguously.
If a Bongard Problem is shown with imperfect hand drawings ("ignoreimperfections" right-BP913), the keyword "discontinuous" can be applied ignoring this. E.g. BP72 is tagged "discontinuous", even though very slightly wrong examples are shown there as it is.
(Note: a BP is only tagged "ignoreimperfections" in the first place when the underlying idea is such that small changes could switch an example's side (keyword "discontinuous") or render it unsortable.) |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "discontinuous" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "continuous" on the OEBP.
In a "continuous" Bongard Problem, no small change should outright flip an example's sorting. It IS allowed for a small change to make an example sorted slightly more ambiguously.
If a Bongard Problem is shown with imperfect hand drawings ("ignoreimperfections" right-BP913), the keyword "discontinuous" can be applied ignoring this. E.g. BP72 is tagged "discontinuous", even though very slightly wrong examples are shown there as it is.
(Note: it is only necessary to tag a BP "ignoreimperfections" in the first place when the underlying idea is such that small changes could switch an example's side (keyword "discontinuous") or render it unsortable.) |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "discontinuous" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "continuous" on the OEBP.
In a "continuous" Bongard Problem, no small change should outright flip an example's sorting. It IS allowed for a small change to make an example sorted slightly more ambiguously.
If a Bongard Problem is shown with imperfect hand drawings ("ignoreimperfections" right-BP913), the keyword "discontinuous" can be applied ignoring this. E.g. BP72 is tagged "discontinuous", even though very slightly wrong examples are shown there as it is.
(Note: it is only necessary to tag a BP "ignoreimperfections" in the first place when the underlying idea is such that small changes could switch an example's side (keyword "discontinuous") or render it unsortable.) |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "discontinuous" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "continuous" on the OEBP.
In a "continuous" Bongard Problem, no small change should outright flip an example's sorting. It IS allowed for a small change to make an example sorted slightly more ambiguously.
If a Bongard Problem is shown with imperfect hand drawings ("ignoreimperfections" right-BP913), the keyword "discontinuous" can be applied ignoring this. E.g. BP72 is tagged "discontinuous", even though very slightly wrong examples are shown there as it is.
Note that it is only necessary to tag a BP "ignoreimperfections" in the first place when the underlying idea is such that small changes could switch an example's side (keyword "discontinuous") or render it unsortable. |
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NAME
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Problems Bongard Problems in which arbitrarily small changes to examples can switch their sorting vs. Problems Bongard Problems in which slightly changed examples remain sorted the same way.
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "discontinuous" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "continuous" on the OEBP.
In a "continuous" Bongard Problem, no small change should outright flip an example's sorting. It IS allowed for a small change to make an example sorted slightly more ambiguously.
If a Bongard Problem is shown with imperfect hand drawings ("ignoreimperfections" right-BP913), then all changes small enough are likely to be overlooked; however, keywords are generally applied relative to the underlying idea, sans imperfect hand drawings. For example, BP72 is tagged "discontinuous", since the underlying idea is discontinuous, even though slightly wrong examples are shown there as it is.
Note that it is only necessary to tag a BP "ignoreimperfections" in the first place when the underlying idea is such that small changes could switch an example's side (BP is tagged "discontinuous") or render it unsortable. |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "discontinuous" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "continuous" on the OEBP.
In a "continuous" Bongard Problem, no small change should outright flip an example's sorting. It IS allowed for a small change to make an example sorted slightly more ambiguously.
If a Bongard Problem is shown with imperfect hand drawings ("ignoreimperfections" right-BP913), then all changes small enough are likely to be overlooked; however, keywords are generally applied relative to the underlying idea sans imperfect hand drawings. For example, BP72 is tagged "discontinuous", since the underlying idea is discontinuous, even though slightly wrong examples are shown there as it is.
Note that it is only necessary to tag a BP "ignoreimperfections" in the first place when the underlying idea is such that small changes could switch an example's side (BP is tagged "discontinuous") or render it unsortable. |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "discontinuous" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "continuous" on the OEBP.
In a "continuous" Bongard Problem, no small change should outright flip an example's sorting. It IS allowed for a small change to make an example sorted slightly more ambiguously.
When a Bongard Problem is shown with imperfect hand drawings ("ignoreimperfections" right-BP913), all changes small enough are likely to be overlooked; however, keywords are generally applied relative to the underlying idea sans imperfect hand drawings. For example, BP72 is tagged "discontinuous", since the underlying idea is discontinuous, even though slightly wrong examples are shown there as it is.
Note that it is only necessary to tag a BP "ignoreimperfections" in the first place when the underlying idea is such that small changes could switch an example's side (BP is tagged "discontinuous") or render it unsortable. |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "discontinuous" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "continuous" on the OEBP.
In a "continuous" Bongard Problem, no small change should outright flip an example's sorting. It IS allowed for a small change to make an example sorted slightly more ambiguously.
When a Bongard Problem is shown with imperfect hand drawings ("ignoreimperfections" right-BP913), all changes small enough are likely to be overlooked; however, the keywords can be applied relative to the underlying idea sans imperfect hand drawings. For example, BP72 is tagged "discontinuous", since the underlying idea is discontinuous, even though slightly wrong examples are shown there as it is.
Note that it is only necessary to tag a BP "ignoreimperfections" in the first place when the underlying idea is such that small changes could switch an example's side (BP is tagged "discontinuous") or render it unsortable. |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "discontinuous" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "continuous" on the OEBP.
In a "continuous" Bongard Problem, no small change should outright flip an example's sorting. It IS allowed for a small change to make an example sorted slightly more ambiguously.
When a Bongard Problem is shown with imperfect hand drawings ("ignoreimperfections" right-BP913), all changes small enough are likely to be overlooked; however, keywords are usually applied relative to the underlying idea sans imperfect hand drawings. (For example, that is how the keyword "exact" left-BP508 is applied.) E.g., BP72 is tagged "discontinuous", since the underlying idea is discontinuous, even though slightly wrong examples are shown there as it is.
Note: it is only necessary to tag a BP "ignoreimperfections" in the first place when the underlying idea is such that small changes could switch an example's side (BP is tagged "discontinuous") or render it unsortable. |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "discontinuous" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "continuous" on the OEBP.
In a "continuous" Bongard Problem, no small change should outright flip an example's sorting. It IS allowed for a small change to make an example sorted slightly more ambiguously.
When a Bongard Problem is tagged "ignoreimperfections" (right-BP913), all changes small enough could be overlooked as imperfections; however, keywords are usually applied relative to a "corrected" version of the Bongard Problem sans imperfect hand drawings. (For example, that is how the keyword "exact" left-BP508 is applied.) So e.g. BP72 is still tagged "discontinuous", since the underlying idea is discontinuous.
Note: it is only necessary to tag a BP "ignoreimperfections" in the first place when the underlying idea is such that small changes could switch an example's side (BP is tagged "discontinuous") or render it unsortable. |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "discontinuous" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "continuous" on the OEBP.
In a "continuous" Bongard Problem, no small change should outright flip an example's sorting. It IS allowed for a small change to make an example sorted slightly more ambiguously.
When a Bongard Problem is tagged "ignoreimperfections" (right-BP913), all changes small enough could be overlooked as imperfections; however, keywords are usually applied relative to a "corrected" version of the Bongard Problem sans imperfect hand drawings. (For example, that is how the keyword "exact" left-BP508 is applied.) So e.g. BP72 is still tagged "discontinuous", since the underlying idea is discontinuous.
Note: it is only necessary to tag a BP "ignoreimperfections" in the first place when the underlying idea is such that small changes could switch an example's side (BP is tagged "discontinuous") or render it unsortable. |
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CROSSREFS
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"Continuous" implies "perfect" (left-BP913).
"Continuous" implies "pixelperfect" (left-BP947).
"Gap" (right-BP964) implies "continuous".
Continuous Bongard Problems tend to either be "fuzzy" (right-BP508), or otherwise not be "allsorted" (right-BP509) or have a "gap" (right-BP964).
See BP1140, which is about any (perhaps large) additions of detail instead of small changes.
"Discontinuous" Bongard Problems are often "exact". |
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