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If another developer was involved in the research process for a task, should I say that "Bob and I worked on this" or that "another developer and I worked on this"?

Of course, others should be acknowledged in general, but I am asking about how to cite them in the context of the in-line text itself, rather than an explicit acknowledgements chapter.

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    What kind of a text are we talking about? A paper? Or a thesis? Or an internal report? Or a project status report? The answer will probably be different for each of these. Commented Jul 23, 2015 at 11:16
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    At least I would have expected Smith instead of Bob Commented Jul 23, 2015 at 12:01
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    @HagenvonEitzen: Really? Commented Jul 23, 2015 at 12:03

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Written Texts

In the context of a written text I usually use the person's title letters (Mr. Dr. Etc.) and state their affiliation if it actually adds something to the point I'm trying to make. Say for example I wish to point out the collaborations I have set up with other institutions, then I'd probably be verbose about it.

Of course it doesn't make sense to explicitly mention collaborators in all written texts. Neither it is customary to do so. For example in a paper the collaborators are listed as authors, and this collaboration relationship is therefore very explicit. In your thesis you should probably concentrate on your work. That doesn't necessary mean you shouldn't explicitly acknowledge collaborators, but that's the type of scenario in which I'd err on the verbose side.

Oral Presentations

In case you are referring to an oral presentation, you could state their title and position the first time you introduce them, and subsequently refer to them by their name whenever you mention them again. Something like:

I conducted this work with Joe Rnano who is Distinguished Professor at the University of Academia.SE. Joe and I demonstrated that ...

I just came out of a conference and that's what most speakers did.

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