![]() ![]() (Recall that Menu is in the appliance’s bottom-left corner.) A window entitled Unsaved Document 1 - gedit should appear, inside of which is a tab entitled Unsaved Document 1. Okay, go ahead and close any open windows, then select Menu > Programming > gedit. Notice, though, that atop the window are three buttons, Home, Dropbox, and pset1, that indicate where you were and where you are you can click buttons like those to navigate back and forth easily. The window’s title should change to pset1, and you should see an otherwise empty folder (since you just created it). (If the folder’s name doesn’t seem to be editable, control-click (i.e., click while holding your keyboard’s control key) the Untitled Folder once, then select Rename…, at which point its name should become editable.) Then double-click that pset1 folder to open it. Rename it pset1 (in all lowercase, with no spaces). Next select New Folder under the gear icon in the window’s top-right corner, at which point a new folder called Untitled Folder should appear. ![]() Then double-click the folder called Dropbox, at which point the window’s title should change to Dropbox. ![]() A window entitled Home should appear, indicating that you’re inside of John Harvard’s "home directory" (i.e., personal folder). Go ahead and double-click Home on John Harvard’s desktop (in the appliance’s top-left corner). Okay, let’s create a folder (otherwise known as a "directory") in which your code for this problem set will soon live. If you’re already a Dropbox user but don’t want your personal files to be synched into the appliance, simply enable Selective Sync, per the CS50 Manual’s instructions. Viewing another’s solution to a problem set’s problem and basing your own solution on it. Submitting the same or similar work to this course that you have submitted or will submit to another. Submitting (after possibly modifying) the work of another individual beyond allowed snippets. Splitting a problem set’s workload with another individual and combining your work. Searching for or soliciting outright solutions to problem sets online or elsewhere. Providing or making available solutions to problem sets to individuals who might take this course in the future. Paying or offering to pay an individual for work that you may submit as (part of) your own. Giving or showing to a classmate your solution to a problem set’s problem when it is he or she, and not you, who is struggling to solve it. Working with (and even paying) a tutor to help you with the course, provided the tutor does not do your work for you.Īccessing a solution in CS50 Vault to some problem prior to (re-)submitting your own.Īsking a classmate to see his or her solution to a problem set’s problem before (re-)submitting your own.ĭecompiling, deobfuscating, or disassembling the staff’s solutions to problem sets.įailing to cite (as with comments) the origins of code or techniques that you discover outside of the course’s own lessons and integrate into your own work, even while respecting this policy’s other constraints. Whiteboarding solutions to problem sets with others using diagrams or pseudocode but not actual code. Turning to the web or elsewhere for instruction beyond the course’s own, for references, and for solutions to technical difficulties, but not for outright solutions to problem set’s problems or your own final project. Sharing snippets of your own code on Reddit or elsewhere so that others might help you identify and fix a bug. Sending or showing code that you’ve written to someone, possibly a classmate, so that he or she might help you identify and fix a bug. Incorporating snippets of code that you find online or elsewhere into your own code, provided that those snippets are not themselves solutions to assigned problems and that you cite the snippets' origins. Helping a classmate identify a bug in his or her code, as by viewing, compiling, or running his or her code, even on your own computer. Communicating with classmates about problem sets' problems in English (or some other spoken language).ĭiscussing the course’s material with others in order to understand it better. ![]()
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