Talk:I before E except after C: Difference between revisions

 
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:: What happens after C, if the pronunciation is not EE? Does the EI become IE? Maybe the solutions could also determine plausibility of "Pronunciation is NOT EE, but still EI after C"
:: [[User:Markhobley|Markhobley]] 01:04, 21 January 2013 (UTC)
 
::: Hi Mark, can you think of a way to automate "just add a flag against each value ..."? --[[User:Paddy3118|Paddy3118]] 07:30, 21 January 2013 (UTC)
 
== Multiple IE or EI in the same word ==
 
Should we count words or occurrences of "ie" and "ei"?
 
How should we handle words that have both "ie" and "ei", or multiple "ie" or multiple "ei"?
--[[User:PauliKL|PauliKL]] 09:35, 21 January 2013 (UTC)
 
: It is OK if a word is in more than one group. --[[User:Paddy3118|Paddy3118]] 20:22, 21 January 2013 (UTC)
 
:: Since these are rare, they do not have a significant influence on the result. Note also that it's entirely possible that the dictionary will change (or will have changed), but we do not expect that this will be enough of a change to matter. If we were concerned with exact counts, instead of plausibility, the task would need to be structured differently. --[[User:Rdm|Rdm]] ([[User talk:Rdm|talk]]) 17:08, 1 April 2013 (UTC)
:: Specifically, four words with both ei and ie: eightieth liechtenstein meier weierstrass, one word with multiple instances of ie: siegfried, and four words with multiple instances of ei: einstein einsteinian einsteinium weinstein -- that's a total of nine words, none of which have a significant 'c' prefix (the only word with 'c' uses it in 'ch'), and that's just not enough to matter for this task. (A much bigger issue is "what is it that decides whether two distinct spellings are the same word or a different word".) --[[User:Rdm|Rdm]] ([[User talk:Rdm|talk]]) 17:19, 1 April 2013 (UTC)
 
:::Thanks for the stats Rdm. I guess I could add ''"Words that could be in multiple categories should be counted in those multiple categories"'' to the task to nail it down, as I wasn't thinking of doing anything more than showing how tenuous the "rule" was. At the moment though I think people referring to the talk page should be OK. --[[User:Paddy3118|Paddy3118]] ([[User talk:Paddy3118|talk]]) 07:06, 2 April 2013 (UTC)
 
==Stretch goal==
Added after this comment in the J entry:
:''Note that if we looked at frequency of use for words, instead of considering all words to have equal weights, we might come up with a different answer.''
I found a list of word frequencies and saw that it could be done. --[[User:Paddy3118|Paddy3118]] ([[User talk:Paddy3118|talk]]) 18:53, 16 April 2013 (UTC)
 
==c solution==
lex yacc flex bison aren't separate languages at rosettacode, nor should they be. I maintain the flex program is a proper c solution and examples deserve spotlight. --LambertDW 01:41, 7 May 2013 (UTC)
 
==On modern C++ as a scripting language==
The blog post [http://www.nu42.com/2015/06/translating-rosetta-code-entry-perl-cpp.html Translating a Rosetta Code entry from Perl to C++] by A. Sinan Unur comments on the existing C++ code as well as comparing modern C++ with scripting languages for this task.
<br> --[[User:Paddy3118|Paddy3118]] ([[User talk:Paddy3118|talk]]) 18:35, 3 July 2015 (UTC)
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