The course’s syllabus acknowledges that interactions among classmates and others can facilitate mastery of the course’s material but cautions students that there remains a line between enlisting the help of another and submitting the work of another. The syllabus then characterizes both sides of that line, elaborating in detail on acts considered “reasonable” and “not reasonable” while providing examples of each. (See Appendix for policy in full.) But the essence of the course’s policy is this: Generally speaking, when asking for help, you may show your code to others, but you may not view theirs. To be sure, two students could contrive a scenario in which they both ask each other for help, but the full policy prescribes guardrails that disallow.
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This is all the stuff that I have submitted for the "CS50 - Introduction to Computer Science" course that I completed on June 17th, 2020. Took the game track. Please view the README.MD file for the academic honesty by Harvard University for more info.
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This is all the stuff that I have submitted for the "CS50 - Introduction to Computer Science" course that I completed on June 17th, 2020. Took the game track. Please view the README.MD file for the academic honesty by Harvard University for more info.
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