Many reviewers object to using a citation reference as a noun, e.g. "in [2] it is shown...". But what is the best way to use a paper in a noun? Classic practice seems to be to refer to the paper by the surname of the first author, but I dislike the habit of ascribing meaning to author ordering. Many paper titles are too long to repeat verbatim. What is to be done?
Troels
Hacker from Denmark. Not as cool as I'd like to be.
Posts
I thought #WGSL was supposed to clean up pointless browser differences, but it seems like #Firefox and #Chrome don't even agree on reserved words. "i64" is reserved in Firefox, but not in Chrome (and not in the spec).
Gallery of #Futhark hedgehogs: https://futhark-lang.org/hedgehogs.html
Is the PDF viewer on the ACM DL wrong, or does the original QuickCheck paper
have terrible kerning? https://dl.acm.org/doi/epdf/10.1145/351240.351266 Downloading the PDF from the ACM DL also results in a PDF with visual artifacts and overlapping letters, but this one is fine: https://www.cs.tufts.edu/~nr/cs257/archive/john-hughes/quick.pdf Has the ACM DL started passing PDFs through some buggy filter?
The omnipresence of autocorrect troubles me because it enforces language normativity and discourages playfulness. I appreciate Germannic languages because they allow creative and evocative use of compound words, but autocorrect adds significant friction to this process. I worry about ossification.