Perl: the Markov chain saw | |
PerlMonks |
Re: Re (tilly) 1: Larry vs. Joel vs. Ovidby Ovid (Cardinal) |
on Nov 21, 2001 at 04:03 UTC ( [id://126682]=note: print w/replies, xml ) | Need Help?? |
tilly wrote: And IMO criticizing Larry Wall for a point he didn't make is just plain unfair. Mea Culpa :( I realize now that the root post came across differently from my intentions. I think Larry has an excellent idea. I just don't think most people (and that includes myself) have the skill to implement it. I think, though, that your 'bathroom' analogy illustrates the difference between humans and computer (and demonstrates the breakdown of the analogy). A human is much better at interpreting meaning than a computer, but we still get things wrong. If I say "I want to hit the man with the shoe", technically, that means "There is a man with a shoe and I want to hit him." Many people, though, would incorrectly interpret this as "I have a shoe and I want to hit the man with it." That's what I mean when I think that people are often bad at liberally accepting input. Now, if I feed that same sentence in a computer that has algorithms to understand English grammar, it may parse the grammar correctly, but get my intent wrong if I really did mean that I have a shoe that I want to hit someone with. How can a computer determine intent if the sentence fits the grammatical rules but doesn't mean what I meant? The more liberal we get, the more we open the room for ambiguity. The more paths a program can take to get to a solution, the more paths there are for bugs. This is all about finding a good middle ground. That's tough to do. Cheers, Join the Perlmonks Setiathome Group or just click on the the link and check out our stats.
In Section
Meditations
|
|