@Ell Then no, not really. It amounts to how ad-hoc polymorphism (aka function overloading) is handled, again. You can’t introduce overloads silly-nilly in Haskell, as mentioned. And the typing rules for e.g. type class methods mean there is not really a counterpart to (nor a need for) e.g. function templates.
That is, if you refer to e.g. (==) it’s really referring to the whole overload in Haskell.
So I converted a 93 min talk video from mp4 (H264) to webm (vp9), encoding took forever, but the file size went from 826MB to 466MB with very minimal quality loss :)
If you’re not using Haskell, it doesn’t matter what it is. If you are, start with understanding the monad instances rather than the monad class itself. If you are starting, you will encounter very little code that is generic over monads—which is the only time you need to grok class Monad.
I'm just saying if I create a system such that I can bind static types to property types and requirements, then I could be able to compose functions from functions that operate on properties or concepts
i.e. if a Player is a Unit, then it should be able to attack another Unit
if a Player is renderable, then it should be able to be rendered by a Renderer
Otherwise compiler error: concepts or properties do not match up.
I wonder if I could get a contract with Amazon to re-write the PC Kindle reader. It's fucking total crap. I takes a minute to start up, (prolly java), is far too fond of circulating arrows and blows up every other day. Amazon should be ashamed of it.
@Ell Sure but it's not a benefit that I really feel. I mean, technically I own the furniture, but for me, I moved from one place with furniture to another place with furniture.