Bug Stomp
Upgrades and changes sometimes have unpredictable results, so post your bugs and glitches in here and I'll get out my trusty wrench and get to fixin'!
Posts 187 - 198 of 8,682
Posts 187 - 198 of 8,682
Rubric
23 years ago
23 years ago
Re/ contractions
How about I've and you've, for ive and youve. You could also add weve and theyve, although they're not very common.
On a related subject, how about "cannot" and "can not". They're both correct, as far as I know, yet they aren't recognized as synonyms.
Also, I'm sure you noticed this, but a list of contractions is popping up in the chat windows.
How about I've and you've, for ive and youve. You could also add weve and theyve, although they're not very common.
On a related subject, how about "cannot" and "can not". They're both correct, as far as I know, yet they aren't recognized as synonyms.
Also, I'm sure you noticed this, but a list of contractions is popping up in the chat windows.
The Professor
23 years ago
23 years ago
Yah, I saw that. It's gone now.
Good suggestions. I've added them, including cannot->can not. So there's no need to use cannot as a Keyword now.
Good suggestions. I've added them, including cannot->can not. So there's no need to use cannot as a Keyword now.
Roget
23 years ago
23 years ago
I don't know if this is a good idea, but tell me what you guys think:
We have x-introduce, x-initiate, x-goodbye, x-hello and x-none.
How about a new one called x-terminate? (no pun intended)
I don't know if this is possible, but could x-terminate be created that would perform the same function as x-gottago? This would work in the same way except the bot doesn't log off. It closes a specific chat window of one conversation.
We have x-introduce, x-initiate, x-goodbye, x-hello and x-none.
How about a new one called x-terminate? (no pun intended)
I don't know if this is possible, but could x-terminate be created that would perform the same function as x-gottago? This would work in the same way except the bot doesn't log off. It closes a specific chat window of one conversation.
The Professor
23 years ago
23 years ago
I think that would appear to many as a bug. A Bot stops responding without any reason- people will thing something is wrong. Plus x-words indicate that a Response is coming.
rexmundi
23 years ago
23 years ago
On the compounds, is there a way you can add a checkbox so we can designate which lines work well in them and which don't. Lines like "If you have to ask..." don't look too good with a following statement.
The Professor
23 years ago
23 years ago
Not yet, but that might be a good idea. Does anyone else have bad compounds coming up (aside from a few repetition errors earlier on)? Or is it generally working well?
Rubric
23 years ago
23 years ago
Re/ compounds --
So far so good. I've seen a few "clunkers", but generally they seem to work well. I need to rephrase a few of the xnone's to accomodate the new process.
I was going to suggest any response that has a possible SEEK should not get a compound tacked on, as that could potentially ruin the nested contexts we've all worked so hard on. That would also allow people to effectively designate certain responses as non-compounds, simply by specifying a Seek response.
Then again, I have yet to see a compound come up on a potential Seek answer, so maybe it already works that way.
So far so good. I've seen a few "clunkers", but generally they seem to work well. I need to rephrase a few of the xnone's to accomodate the new process.
I was going to suggest any response that has a possible SEEK should not get a compound tacked on, as that could potentially ruin the nested contexts we've all worked so hard on. That would also allow people to effectively designate certain responses as non-compounds, simply by specifying a Seek response.
Then again, I have yet to see a compound come up on a potential Seek answer, so maybe it already works that way.
The Professor
23 years ago
23 years ago
Good thought Rubric. I just made sure Seeks dont form Compound Responses.
jbryanc
23 years ago
23 years ago
Don't know if it's a bug or an observation. The synonym detector works too damn well. I figured "pregnant" and "yearn" were both unique words. But no. Words evoking size and ripeness seem to call up the pregnant response, and "long" brings up the "yearn" one. Makes for some very botlike chats.
The Professor
23 years ago
23 years ago
Really? I'll have to look into that. My initial impression was that the synonym system was very specific. There are a few words in WordNet that are crossed with the wrong thing. I think sneeze is a synonym for the American Crow, but I havent seen many other cross-overs. Does anyone else see the synonym system acting too broadly?
jbryanc
23 years ago
23 years ago
No, Prof. They are not wrong, just unexpected. Pregnant in some context does mean "large" or "ripe". Likewise, "yearn" means "long" as in "I long for a pickle". It's "How yearn is your cat's tail" that makes it all weird. I'll see if I can find a specific instance.
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