How to find articles with very bad/good ratings?
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Hello everybody, is there a possibility to list articles sorted by their rating? I want to know the article with the lowest and the highest rating independent of category or thematic. Is this possible? (Only for fun, this is not really serious!). Greetings Norman-Timo
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Hello everybody, is there a possibility to list articles sorted by their rating? I want to know the article with the lowest and the highest rating independent of category or thematic. Is this possible? (Only for fun, this is not really serious!). Greetings Norman-Timo
enter the purgatory at your own risks... :rolleyes::cool:
You don't know where to start ? ask a good friend
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Hello everybody, is there a possibility to list articles sorted by their rating? I want to know the article with the lowest and the highest rating independent of category or thematic. Is this possible? (Only for fun, this is not really serious!). Greetings Norman-Timo
A little O.T. and not answering your question, but I find it intersting that you use the adjective "thematic" this way, instead of "theme." Is this a new trend? "Verbing" is old now, so maybe "nouning" is the new thing? I ask because I heard a politician doing the same thing in a news story on the radio. (I'm not just criticizing your grammar, I really am curious about this new popular use of "thematic." (heck, maybe it isn't new, I just happened to notice it recently)).
Matt Gerrans
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A little O.T. and not answering your question, but I find it intersting that you use the adjective "thematic" this way, instead of "theme." Is this a new trend? "Verbing" is old now, so maybe "nouning" is the new thing? I ask because I heard a politician doing the same thing in a news story on the radio. (I'm not just criticizing your grammar, I really am curious about this new popular use of "thematic." (heck, maybe it isn't new, I just happened to notice it recently)).
Matt Gerrans
I see it all of the time on movie reviews.
"Approved Workmen Are Not Ashamed" - 2 Timothy 2:15
"Judge not by the eye but by the heart." - Native American Proverb
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Hello everybody, is there a possibility to list articles sorted by their rating? I want to know the article with the lowest and the highest rating independent of category or thematic. Is this possible? (Only for fun, this is not really serious!). Greetings Norman-Timo
Please rephrase your question with using the term How to. We've explicitly reserved this phrase for tutorials.
This statement is false.
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Please rephrase your question with using the term How to. We've explicitly reserved this phrase for tutorials.
This statement is false.
:laugh::laugh:
Artificial Intelligence is no match for Natural Stupidity
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Hello everybody, is there a possibility to list articles sorted by their rating? I want to know the article with the lowest and the highest rating independent of category or thematic. Is this possible? (Only for fun, this is not really serious!). Greetings Norman-Timo
Wait a minute. CP has bad articles? Say it ain't so, Joe. :)
Chris Meech I am Canadian. [heard in a local bar] Nobody likes jerks. [espeir] The zen of the soapbox is hard to attain...[Jörgen Sigvardsson] I wish I could remember what it was like to only have a short term memory.[David Kentley]
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A little O.T. and not answering your question, but I find it intersting that you use the adjective "thematic" this way, instead of "theme." Is this a new trend? "Verbing" is old now, so maybe "nouning" is the new thing? I ask because I heard a politician doing the same thing in a news story on the radio. (I'm not just criticizing your grammar, I really am curious about this new popular use of "thematic." (heck, maybe it isn't new, I just happened to notice it recently)).
Matt Gerrans
Hello Mr. Gerrans, I'm not an english native speaker, so it's possible that I use wrong expressions in an more wrong context ;-) I'm German, and we have the noun "Thematik", so I thought there is an analogue noun in English. You're right if you say: use "theme" to be correct. And I did not recognize a special use of word "thematic" (I recently does not hear much english ;-) Funny that this word is used in similar context in America (for example in movie reviews (see another reply of this parent post). Greetings Norman-Timo
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Please rephrase your question with using the term How to. We've explicitly reserved this phrase for tutorials.
This statement is false.
Hello Mr. Kaiser, you're right. I'm very very sorry about that... Is any of following questions allowed: [I]Is there any way HOW TO find articles with very bad/good ratings?[/I] or [I]How to find "How-To" articles which are rated very bad/good?[/I] or [I]*Beeep* find articles with very bad/good ratings?[/I] or [I]Articles, good/bad rated, how? (Ugagaga)[/I] :laugh: ;) Greetings Norman-Timo
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Hello Mr. Kaiser, you're right. I'm very very sorry about that... Is any of following questions allowed: [I]Is there any way HOW TO find articles with very bad/good ratings?[/I] or [I]How to find "How-To" articles which are rated very bad/good?[/I] or [I]*Beeep* find articles with very bad/good ratings?[/I] or [I]Articles, good/bad rated, how? (Ugagaga)[/I] :laugh: ;) Greetings Norman-Timo
Well... since you asked. :)
Norman-Timo wrote:
[I]Is there any way HOW TO find articles with very bad/good ratings?[/I]
Nope, bad grammar. Remove the HOW and you've got a winner.
Norman-Timo wrote:
[I]How to find "How-To" articles which are rated very bad/good?[/I]
Nope, still bad grammar. How would I find... How could I find.. or How do I find.. "How-To" articles is perfectly acceptable.
Norman-Timo wrote:
[I]*Beeep* find articles with very bad/good ratings?[/I]
This is perfectly acceptable. Kid sister rule appreciates the beeep. And depending on what Beeep stands for could be good grammar.
Norman-Timo wrote:
[I]Articles, good/bad rated, how? (Ugagaga)[/I]
Nope, sorry bad grammar again. Although, its phrasing suggests that it might be acceptable anyway. Now really your habits of grammar are your own, so if this is just your linguistic style then feel free to tell me to stick it in my hat. :laugh:
This statement is false.
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Hello Mr. Gerrans, I'm not an english native speaker, so it's possible that I use wrong expressions in an more wrong context ;-) I'm German, and we have the noun "Thematik", so I thought there is an analogue noun in English. You're right if you say: use "theme" to be correct. And I did not recognize a special use of word "thematic" (I recently does not hear much english ;-) Funny that this word is used in similar context in America (for example in movie reviews (see another reply of this parent post). Greetings Norman-Timo
Genau, das macht spass! I guess it was just coincidence in this case. And, don't worry about your English, surely it is much better than my Deutsch! :)
Matt Gerrans