The AI Engine
This forum is for discussion of how The Personality Forge's AI Engine works. This is the place for questions on what means what, how to script, and ideas and plans for the Engine.
Posts 1,089 - 1,100 of 7,768
Posts 1,089 - 1,100 of 7,768
OnyxFlame
23 years ago
23 years ago
No I mean if you copy all the responses in a keyphrase or something. Course even if I could get it to straight copy em all into the form at once I'd still hafta take out the little Add thingies but that's not a big deal.
OnyxFlame
23 years ago
23 years ago
I notice (subj) is now picking up a lot more words, including punctuation. I hope this gets figured out pretty soon because some of the bots have been saying pretty embarrassing things lately.
deleted
23 years ago
23 years ago
It really depends if you are talking about simple or complex subject / predicate pairs.
Skysaw
23 years ago
23 years ago
I think it's picking up too much too. Punctuation should never be a part of (subj)
deleted
23 years ago
23 years ago
True enough, I was thinking about that after I posted it
I remembered some conversation where it picked up a trailing question mark, and used it in the sentence to wreak havoc


OnyxFlame
23 years ago
23 years ago
I guess this could be prof preparing to make us able to pick how much of (subj) we want it to pick up. If so it's a good thing, but as it is it causes a lot of embarrassing responses that'd really suck during the contest.
Skysaw
23 years ago
23 years ago
If that's the long version of (subj), give me the short every time! Well, I'll probably want short all the time anyway, even without the bug.

Shadyman
23 years ago
23 years ago
lol
complex subject/predicate versus simple subject/predicate would be cool...
hey speaking of that, prof, another thing to add to the list is (pred) or (predicate).. It's pretty easy though, if you have a sentence, (I hope my art turns out)
Sally went to the park.
Subj < - - - Pred - - >
Sally and Freddy went to the park to play basketball.
< - - - subj - - >< - - - - - - - pred - - - - - - - >
or even
Since they were bored, Sally and Freddy went to the park.
The subject would be 'Sally and Freddy' and the predicate would be 'went to the park since they were bored'
Correct me if I'm wrong, I'm sleep-deprived and caffeine and sugar high
complex subject/predicate versus simple subject/predicate would be cool...
hey speaking of that, prof, another thing to add to the list is (pred) or (predicate).. It's pretty easy though, if you have a sentence, (I hope my art turns out)
Sally went to the park.
Subj < - - - Pred - - >
Sally and Freddy went to the park to play basketball.
< - - - subj - - >< - - - - - - - pred - - - - - - - >
or even
Since they were bored, Sally and Freddy went to the park.
The subject would be 'Sally and Freddy' and the predicate would be 'went to the park since they were bored'
Correct me if I'm wrong, I'm sleep-deprived and caffeine and sugar high

Butterfly Dream
23 years ago
23 years ago
"Shadyman, you made me open my Bedford Handbook five years after graduation," said the English major, "but you are correct."
OnyxFlame
23 years ago
23 years ago
I think what'd be neat is a way to change the tense of (subj). For instance if you have "I like to fish" you could have a response with (subj-ing) or something, and it'd turn out as "I never have time for fishing" or somesuch. Could get a bit complicated with these really long (subj)s though, as witness several times when my bot has said *make outs you*

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