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- From: chil@fraser.sfu.ca (Keith Lim)
- Subject: Re: April Fools
- Message-ID: <chil.722173101@sfu.ca>
- Keywords: Lemur
- Sender: news@sfu.ca
- Organization: Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, B.C., Canada
- References: <BxvAyu.Fr4@acsu.buffalo.edu> <1992Nov18.222453.4317@news.stolaf.edu>
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 11:38:21 GMT
- Lines: 128
-
- hakari@lars.acc-admin.stolaf.edu (The Conformist Contrabass Clarinetist) writes:
-
- >Last year in my backgrounds of lit class, the prof forgot about our final...
- >Someone went to chase him down. They found him about 20 min later, but he
- >forgot to bring the finals with him. We ended up with take-homes due the next
- >week...
-
- This reminds me of... [warning: long, boring story]
-
- I was in a first-year economics class once, and on the day of the class's
- final (which was in the evening), the prof. was nowhere to be found all day
- (some students were upset; they wanted to ask last-minute questions.) About
- ten minutes before the exam, someone went to ask the office, and found out
- that the prof. hadn't even submitted a sample exam paper to the office. In
- other words, no prof. and no master copy of any exam that could be copied
- and distributed.
-
- The prof. finally appeared about two minutes before the exam was due to
- begin, and, I swear, his face was a rather fetching shade of green. All he
- could mutter (in a voice of despair) was, "I can't get the exam out of the
- computer!"
-
- Apparently, he had put the finishing touches on the exam that afternoon
- (typos, whitespace, other formatting like boldfacing, etc.), and when he
- saved it, he got a disk full error, and the computer hung on him. Rebooting,
- and deleting other files on the disk didn't help--the problem was in the
- copy of the exam file itself. As far as I could figure, the file was
- partially saved when the disk full error occured, and the program didn't
- do any tidying up, leaving the disk copy of the file corrupted in some way.
- No amount of freeing up space would allow the file to be saved properly,
- neither would whatever text on the screen print hardcopy. Any missing text
- that was retyped would not be saved onto disk. ("I've typed the last page
- about four times already!")
-
- Well, the prof. and the vice-principal (it was just in a small college,
- and everyone from the janitors to the principal was pretty much on
- familiar terms with everyone else--something I miss in this big, unfriendly
- university--but I digress)...the prof. and the vice-principal (who knew a
- little about computers) disappeared into an office to try and sort things
- out while us students just milled around aimlessly or else sat down and
- made use of the unexpected extra las-minute-revision time.
-
- Some thirty minutes later, the vp appeared and announced that the exam was
- postponed until the next day: "...really sorry. Go home now; there's no
- point staying here anymore...."
-
- Well, that would normally be not an unreasonable thing to ask of students,
- given the unexpectedness and nature of the problem. The complication was
- that three of the students scheduled to take the exam already had tickets
- for a flight back to their homes the next day. In the morning. Early in the
- morning.
-
- The prof. and the vp, not surprisingly, are rather upset of this new
- development. A hurried conference takes place. Well, things aren't that bad,
- after all. In the half hour of hacking, they've managed to persuade the
- first two-thirds or so of the exam to print out. Run off three copies, and
- those first three students can start doing the exam while everyone tries to
- figure out how to get the last one-third to print out too (after it's typed
- in *yet* again, of course.) Two hours or less to figure that out. Meanwhile,
- the announcement is made that for the rest of the students, the exam would
- be held the next day, afternoon.
-
- Students start leaving. I happened to not be in any particular hurry to
- leave. (I understood the subject material well, and was feeling quite
- confident that I would do well; so I didn't feel the need to rush home and
- do more last-minute revision. I *did* get a final grade of A+, yes A+, in
- the course--but I'm getting ahead of myself in this story.) So I'm one of
- the last few students still hanging around the college after about five to
- ten minutes after the announcement of the postponed exam. The prof. appears
- (looking somewhat calmer and a lot less greener than he did at his initial
- appearance) and asks if anyone knows anything about computers.
-
- Yes, that's right, yours truly is, at the point, the only student around
- who knows things about computers (everyone else knows the right way to insert
- a disk into a disk drive, and how to flip a power switch, and that's about
- it.) An invitation is extended to me to "see if [I] can do anything."
-
- Complication (another one). I haven't written the exam yet, and am due to
- write it the following day. So--how am I supposed to work on the file and
- get it to save and print correctly if I can't very well see *any* of the
- text in it?
-
- First attempts to work around this problem weren't very useful. For example,
- the prof. scrolled through the file until he hit the end-of-file. Then, he
- scrolled the text off the screen until all that remained were a couple of
- blank lines (which were just whitespace: question separators, the like) and
- the no-more-lines indicator. Only then was I allowed to look at the screen.
- Prof. points out the blank lines to me: "See, that's the end of the file as
- it's saved on disk. This is not really the end of the exam; there should be
- more, but it isn't here. Ummm...does this help? Can you tell what's gone
- wrong from this?" (Gee, if I could, would I be in school? Don't you think
- I'd be out making money as the master computer consultant genius wizard?)
-
- Anyway, about all I could do was to try typing a few test lines, then try
- various save options. Nothing worked. Any and all new lines I typed were
- gone the next time the file was called up from disk. (My guess is that the
- EOF character was somehow replaced bu a BitBucket character, and anything
- new just went into it.) And the damn thing still would print properly
- anyway, at least the page where the file abruptly ended wouldn't. (But the
- previous, complete, pages did, and those were the ones the three students
- were writing right at that moment.)
-
- If I had Norton, or some disk editor program, I could have manually put in
- an EOF character into the file, turning it back into a "normal", (albeit
- examwise-incomplete) file. Of course--of course!--I didn't have any such
- program with me, and neither did anyone else. All I had to work with was
- [spit] MS-DOS. And of course, I *still* couldn't look at the file itself
- anyway. The only thing I could suggest was that anything that couldn't
- be printed out be typed in again, *on a new disk*, *_one with lots of free
- space on it._* [*_ and _* = italics *and* underlining :) ] "Sorry, but that
- advice is the about the only help I can give, since I can't look at the file,
- and don't have any disk tools anyway. Sorry."
-
- And that's the story. Went home after that, did a little revision (just to
- make sure I hadn't forgotten anything), came back the next day, wrote the
- exam, and, yes, got an A+ for the course. Boring epilogue. Whether the
- difference between an A and an A+ was due to my attempt to help is something
- I don't care about. I got an A+, that's all that's important. :)
-
- --
- Keith_Lim@sfu.ca Simon Fraser University, Burnaby B.C., V5A 1S6, Canada
- ** Hon Cog Sci Min Psyc Senate URC FARSIDE LEAD CCCS COCP PSU **
- Any views and opinions above have been carefully thought out and are sensible,
- and so (obviously) do not represent SFU or any groups/committees within SFU. :|
-
- "Woof, woof, woof, woof, woof, woof!" --Arsinio Hall's audience, any show
- "Woof, woof, woof, woof, woof, woof!" --Bud Bundy, Married...With Children
- "Woof, woof, woof, woof, woof, woof!" --Dr. Beverly Crusher, ST:TNG, "True Q"
-