Comment by pvtmert
10 hours ago
I started making deliberate grammar and spelling mistakes in professional context. Not like I have a perfect writing anyway, but at least I could prove that it was self-written, not an auto-generated slop. (Could be self-written slop though :)
This applies not only work-stuff itself also to the job-applications/cv/resume and cover-letters.
unrelated but I've never understood how to put a smiley at the end of parenthetical sentences (which comes up surprisingly often for me since I use smileys a lot and also like using parentheses). Just the smiley as an end parentheses (like this :) feels off but adding another parentheses (like this :) ) makes it look like it should be nested which causes problems since I also tend to nest parenthetical sentences (like (this)).
Yes I enjoy lisp, how could you tell
The answer is obviously to balance your smiley faces and wrap the entire statement in the smiley face sentiment. ((: Like this :))
Ah, Spanish notation.
I like this simply for the absurdity of it, but will only use it when the entire parenthetical is modified by the smiley instead of a single word or phrase (:since I really like it:) but (it looks ugly, no hard feelings :) )
That’s quite the Scheme…
Your comment made me realise that there's logic to this (like this :), since in HTML we can:
instead of: <li> ... </li>
and <img alt='this'> instead of <img ... />
You might like Lisp, but what you're saying reminds me of the late 00s/early 2010s xHTML2 vs. HTML5 debate :)
I'm an avid defender of xHTML. You can pry it from my cold dead hands
You monster.
Thanks, I hate it :)
Post C++11 you can just do (like this:)), no extra space needed before the last parenthesis.
But then it looks like I'm using a double smiley[0] which I do actually use on occasion
[0] :))
I tend to rephrase myself so I dont end a statement inside a parenthesis with a smiley.
It's one of those things I think are worth putting some extra effort into, I'm glad to see at least one other person giving it some thought. Thx <3
Use dashes and the problem goes away! Well, you gain the LLM witch-hunt, but heh, no free lunch.
I have the same problem. I just ditch the smiley face. :)
never >:(
1 reply →
The relevant XKCD: https://xkcd.com/541
This only works as "proof" up until someone innovates an "authenticity" flag on the LLM output.
tbh u can basically do this now lol... no flag needed.
if u want it to sound more real u just gotta tell the bot to write that way. like literally just ask it to throw in some typos or forget to capitalize stuff. or use slang and kinda ramble instead of being all robotic and organized.
https://github.com/ethel-dev/misspell
I'm trademarking the improper use of it/it's, there/their/they're, were/we're, etc as a sign of my humanity. Apple's typocorrect is doing it for me anyways.
> I started making deliberate grammar and spelling mistakes in professional context.
I've also noticed an increase of this in myself and others, I used to edit a lot more before sending anything, but now it seems more authentic if you just hit send so it's more off the cuff with typos, broken sentences and all.
I'm sure an LLM could easily mimic this but it's not their default.
I’ve been doing the same thing. Basically a Turing test.
I appreciate you including a few minor mistakes in this very post:
> I started making deliberate grammar and spelling mistakes in professional context[s]. Not like I have ~a~ perfect writing anyway, but at least I could prove that it was self-written, not an auto-generated slop. (Could be self-written slop though :)
> This applies not only [to] work-stuff itself also to the job-applications/cv/resume and cover-letters.
I conclude you are real.
To me the OP read like a particular dialect of English which is quite common on HN, rather than being incorrect.