@ChristophRüegg It's definitely a good idea to have it on there - there are actually a few others that would be beneficial, too, once it has proper status
@ChristophRüegg Registration and such is probably more a matter of the leadership team vs. a working group - but it'd be discussed once things were at a point where it's ready, I'm sure
Saw the conversation about SO chat vs. IRC vs. Some custom implementation on fsharp.org
Reed: the ircbrowse.net site is written in haskell, its not "mature" yet. But you can move in the past by supplying the date in the URL. For example, yesterday would be ircbrowse.net/day/fsharp/2014/07/29
Reed: there was also a github project run a while back, just a daily cron of IRC logs for the fsharp channel... The freenode channel has been est. since 2007
If you want to get a good experience from IRC, I'd suggest not using a web client (especially the java applet), even the freenode webclient I pr'd into the fsharpfoundation a few months back
best to use something like irssi, or if you don't like command lines and text streams, there is xchat... or if you're on windows there is mIRC
I think there are many people who prefer IRC over something like this SO chat (there are 77 users there for the most part), mainly because IRC has a strong *nix tradition... it fits into a *nix users environment well. In the case of freenode, open source projects are kind of expected to have a presence there... it is very OSS community-oriented.
I for one don't see a problem with many places to chat about F#, it increases exposure. I think if anyone wanted to unify community chat, it would be difficult... People have preferences and environments that work best for them... as evidenced by the survey
#FSharp single place to chat results after 1 day. 25 respondents. 17 interested. 8 not. IRC still strong among community. We can do better I am sure. IRC still seems like WOT and in my view creates barriers to entry for newcomers. I don't mind IRC, but we could do far more.
@jruizaranguren no firm verdict yet. Currently there from the back of the napkin survey there is a 2/3 majority that want something better than IRC. But there are still some justifiable IRC stalwarts. I don't think any solution will make everyone happy. My view is that we can lower the barrier to entry if we make it more accessible.
But that is just my opinion. I don't speak for the community as a whole. People are free to agree or disagree as they think fit. I am going to spike an idea, then leave it to the majority to choose.
I think it is absurd to have a never-ending discussion about the best technological way to do it. The mean does not matter at all. Building F# community does. I can use a system that I don't like :-)
@jruizaranguren the problems is that the community is too fractured to even get a single discussion going :P Thats one of the things that sparked my interest in this idea.
Either way it has sparked enough interest for me to feel that starting an experiment is worth my while. Maybe nothing will come of it, but I would have learned something in the process.
The Clojure Prismatic/Plumbing library can be used in order to provide a declarative and explicit definition of an application or module functions' graph.
In short, it provides a means to specify each function as a node with a label, which is also the output label, the labeled inputs, and an imp...
@jruizaranguren ok. I am going to have to read your question very slowly. I haven't used clojure before so I am not really familiar with how it works. I am still getting the hang of F# too
@jruizaranguren you use too many big words for me :P
As Scott W said in his one talk. I am a bear of little brain
@ChristophRüegg recalled has some commonalities with the features I want to develop. I planned to use computation expressions for all side effects (monitoring) so thanks, this is a good source to take inspiration.
But it does not solve my main struggle with F#, the "dynamic" model I want to build.
@MattEllen Invite me to a secret mod room if you have time, I have a hunch but am also a bit curious about what it is. Most subtleties fly well above my head cos engrish
@AshtonKJ hmm I have power tools, tried to drag-drop a folder into the proj but it got a wrongy icon. Also tried project add the C# way but there was no folder option.
@JohanLarsson oh, it's nothing secret, just the bruhahaha between kit and robusto, and how people talk to each other sometimes. normally it doesn't bother me, but I'm feeling delicate this week
@Maslow I am starting on a prototype. We'll see what direction it takes. But I like quite a few of these features, with some IRC type features thrown in (private rooms, no rep needed to talk, etc).
well dangit, I can't seem to find the really interesting article I thought it was about how stackoverflow deals with griefers/spammers/unhelpful users I guess I'll just link the podcast blog.stackoverflow.com/2008/08/podcast-17 I thought there was a text article about it
Does the terseness of F# offset the cognitive load from stuff like |> >> etc? An F# program can hardly be said to read like English for a non programmer?
gist.github.com/t0yv0/0efa00489a0b9b032d48 - silly stuff, continuation monad with callcc/throw matching the signatures from the CML/SML reports I'm translating namely val callcc : (Cont<'T> -> Job<'T>) -> Job<'T> and val throw: Cont<'T> -> 'T -> Job<'X> - unfortunately since continuations are not native in F# there's a Job layer (same thing as async)
In computing, aspect-oriented programming (AOP) is a programming paradigm that aims to increase modularity by allowing the separation of cross-cutting concerns. AOP forms a basis for aspect-oriented software development.
AOP includes programming methods and tools that support the modularization of concerns at the level of the source code, while "aspect-oriented software development" refers to a whole engineering discipline.
Aspect-oriented programming entails breaking down program logic into distinct parts (so-called concerns, cohesive areas of functionality). Nearly all programming paradigms support...
I can't see things as draggable boxes. I've had experience with programming virtual modular synths with that paradigm and let me tell you it's not efficient.
The "virtual analogue" ones are simply digital emulations, so DSPs again suit that need in engineering terms.
However, a mix of the two may work well.
As long as breakpoints can be caught and viewed properly. Such as: When a breakpoint is hit, the IDE drops into the box-in-a-box-in-a-box, to where the actual code is typed, showing the code lines.