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12:00
fuck it
I'll leave classes in common
or not, wait
runApp :: LoadFn us -> DrawFn us -> IO ()
runApp loadFn drawFn = do
    window <- glishaInitWindow
    initialUserState <- loadFn

    evalStateT glishaLoop $ GlishaState initialUserState window drawFn

    glishaSuccessfulExit window
this does not depend on any particular windowing library
or even window class
> I think the question there is "what improves readability?" If yes/no on/off improve readability, it makes sense to keep them. I think not/is/isnt/and/or definitely do, but it's all quite subjective.
Anyone involved with Perl or Ruby should never be allowed anywhere near language design
Ven
Ven
@CatPlusPlus Let's ask the TCL and PHP guys to do that !
@BartekBanachewicz The problem, for me, of C++ is that the difficulty is unsafe. You have to know a lot of stuff to make a program be safe. Syntactical sugar is not dangerous
user1804599
Gear ftw.
@Ven I'd say that dynamic typing is unsafe.
Ven
Ven
12:03
And I'd agree :-)
PR welcome !
with what, a type system out of thin air?
> I have to say that I'm a bit afraid that CoffeeScript is losing its soul. -- Isn't "reading like a natural language" one of the goals of CoffeeScript?
Ven
Ven
@CatPlusPlus it is. I can find a verse that parse as coffeescript. Want to see it ?
There's one language that compiles to JS and is not haskell that's doing it right and it would be Roy
12:04
well the second one would be Elm but c'mon
anyway, Roy has H-M
Also I know what Zoidlangs really are
A metacommentary on the state of the hipster industry
Ven
Ven
Doesn't Elm has HM ?
@Ven yeah but Elm is really so far from Haskell, isn't it?
Ven
Ven
Really ?
12:05
(from subset of haskell, that is)
@Ven it's nearly identical
@BartekBanachewicz Because 1) the fact that you are using those things commonly shouldn't be a property of said things. 2) the module is not self-describing 3) I think you should move everything commonly used in separated (correctly named modules).
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz ah, I think I didn't get the irony
mr5
mr5
@Xeo Wow. That explains a lot! Thanks! still reading
Yeah common/utils is lazy namespacing
@Jefffrey why it should not? These are things that are shared by pretty much every application using Glisha, hence, common.
oh come the fuck on
12:06
Not that anyone cares
user3010322
Names are hard.
@Ven I didn't. My bad.
There's almost always a "misc" namespace and however you call it doesn't really matter
util is really util that's not specific to glisha code for me
hm, dunno, moving classes to a separate module sounds awfully like specifying an interface
but then again, it's been proven to work, innit
maybe I should call it "Interface"
Singletons are also been proved to work.
Until you need to test the class.
Ven
Ven
12:09
@CatPlusPlus is.gd/NuBxgb Here you go ! Look at that gorgeous CoffeeScript !
@Jefffrey grrr stop making that harder and help me instead
Ven
Ven
A cool verse parsing as Coffee ! Isn't it amazing
@BartekBanachewicz Link to this "common" module please? (I'm lazy)
user1804599
12:10
@Ven can I use that in a switch case?
Ven
Ven
@rightfold what ?
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz FWIW, there are things like Control.Monad.State.Class, which contains the class, and where I took the "Classes" from
user1804599
switch image-picker.val!
| null => alert('')
| otherwise =>
    callback that # this here
    dialog.modal(\hide)
Almost as amazing as farts
Xeo
Xeo
12:11
It's just re-exported in Control.Monad.State
Ven
Ven
@rightfold oh ! yes, yes you can. switch anaphorizes
user1804599
But it doesn't work.
okey, I'll go with that
Ven
Ven
@rightfold I didn't see the "that"; my bad :)
user1804599
that is unset.
12:11
if it doesn't work I can always switch
that's what the develop branch is for.
No that's what feature branches are for
git gud scrub
Ven
Ven
@rightfold Ah, indeed, we don't anaphorize default topic.
@CatPlusPlus I'm working alone, it would be an overkill
user1804599
@Ven Beh.
> Ciao from a tea drinker (though i like the Esperança fair trade
coffee pretty much; pretty smooth),
12:13
@BartekBanachewicz Blocking yourself is even more annoying than blocking others
Quite a weird way to end an e-mail.
@CatPlusPlus how am I blocking myself here? I use broken branches. But it doesn't really make a lot of sense to make feat branches because I always finish one feat before moving to another
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ugh, "fair trade"
user1804599
@Ven it works if I use that in the body of the other case. :P
user1804599
12:13
But that is fugly hack lol.
@Xeo What is it?
Ven
Ven
@rightfold Feel free to open an issue, I'll try to get to it tonight
user1804599
Whokay!
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Something about "good working conditions for coffee bean harvester"
But it's basically bullshit
from what I've seen so far
12:15
@Xeo Oh, that.
Xeo
Xeo
Well, not only coffee bean harvesters. But people like that
user3010322
Conflict-free diamonds
user3010322
Fair-Trade Coffee
user3010322
Fair-Trade Weaving/Sewing
12:16
That sort of label is the kind of thing that suits quickly catch on and suck out of all meaning.
Ven
Ven
@rightfold You could even PR :P !
user1804599
I am not at all familiar with the LS source code.
user1804599
Are you Nami-Doc?
Ven
Ven
@rightfold yes :). I linked the coco issue. See the attached commit
It's the same thing you have to do on LS
user1804599
OIC :P
user3010322
12:18
Time to make a GamepadDriver / Gamepad interaction work.
I think my sidereal drive parts have arrived, yay, there goes my sleep for tonight.
fuck
fuck fuck fuck
dependencies everywhere
user3010322
Sidereal drive... hm.
@BartekBanachewicz, class Drawable should be in a separated module (Glisha.Drawable) IMHO. Also data GlishaState, type GlishaInner and newtype Glisha in a separate Glisha.Glisha module and then the rest in a Glisha.Windowing or something like that.
moving drawable away solves like 1% of the problem
@Jefffrey there's a problem with that; GlishaState uses G.Window inside
12:20
It's not about solving problems, it's about code separation.
code separation is solving problems
@BartekBanachewicz what's the problem?
@BartekBanachewicz Now I understand why some of you guys have so much aversion to external dependencies.
You can't even handle the internal ones.
there.
@Jefffrey um it depends on particular windowing library?
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
12:22
what's the use in putting it in a different module if it has a dependency?
if GlishaState was inner-library-agnostic it would be ok
but it's not
and then everything collapses
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz Make it so!
Banana Chewits got a lil' crush?
Xeo
Xeo
12:23
Dunno, it's your code :P
data GlishaState us = GlishaState { userState :: us, window :: G.Window, drawFn :: DrawFn us }
parametrize on window type?
If two things have a circular dependency, they're one thing.
That's how approach such things.
parametrization on window type could solve it
Xeo
Xeo
12:23
class GlishaWindow and your interface in there, maybe.
and then parametrise, ye
Also do not forget the #1 solution of software engineering: add another layer of indirection.
@Xeo oh that would be extremely tedious, I think. I am not sure if I want to go in that at this point.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ^
I'd need to think deeply and define the generic window interface
I don't understand what's the problem.
2 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
If two things have a circular dependency, they're one thing.
it's not about putting code in files
it's about structuring it in a way that makes sense to separate them in files
...said the Glisha.Common and Glisha.Util guy.
12:27
@R.MartinhoFernandes Or there's a common subset that can be split apart from them
@Jefffrey I told you like twice why these are called that way
Then keep everything in and call it Glisha.Windowing
Utils and Common don't belong in the same module
like, at all
Why not?
I'm talking about Glisha.Common.
12:28
Semantically that's the same thing
21 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
util is really util that's not specific to glisha code for me
Then it shouldn't be in Glisha namespace
hm, it shouldn't
but where do I put it?
Control.Utils?
user1804599
In F# you can add new stuff to existing modules.
12:30
@BartekBanachewicz Control.Monad.Helper(s)
Or whatever, it doesn't really matter.
Xeo
Xeo
Hm... Having to deal with tagged<I, T> in variant-visitor code is annoying. Stupid boost::variant.
I'm not really sure what your maybe' is
I think it was commented
anyway parametrizing GlishaState solves half of the problem
Oh argument order
12:32
I can't parametrize user classes that way
But it really doesn't make sense to put most-specific argument first
as in, user code can't see the window type glisha is using
so I have to define it in between
user1804599
You can always use flip at call site.
and export LoadFn and DrawFn from the framework module
no other way
wait no way
can I export type aliases?
@rightfold I'm not sure how you would in this case
so the modules have to export type variables for their components
b -> (a -> b) -> Maybe a -> b --- to --- Maybe a -> b -> (a -> b) -> b
and then I can define my class in terms of them, hiding them from the user
btw that unless' can be done with flip
12:35
GARGADFDASfgajkh
no fuck no.
everything depends on everything
I'm terrible
Good design
someone fix that mess
I'll cry in the corner
btw better name for bool is iif
user1804599
12:36
iff.
I got those 3 from somewhere
Okay what are you even splitting to what
I wanted to split user-facing code from internal stuff
user has to see 3 things basically
Okay, what's user-facing and what's internal
@CatPlusPlus (-->)
Xeo
Xeo
12:38
@CatPlusPlus Why not bool? Mirrors maybe and either
Or is it because of the argument order again?
@BartekBanachewicz Just... don't export the internal stuff?
Glisha monad, DrawFn/LoadFn type aliases, and all Glishasafe functions
@Xeo Eh, I don't like it
@R.MartinhoFernandes that was the 2nd solution. I wanted to try dividing in modules first
Hay @R.MartinhoFernandes - I just noticed something. You gong to AM gig too?
12:38
@rightfold fff
I guess just hiding internal stuff would be way easier
but then again, in a well designed code it should be equally easy to split into two modules
@MartinJames Yeah. Three friends of mine, a friend of one of them, and the brother of another one of them talked me into it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hokay :)
12:40
uh no it's just close to impossible
@BartekBanachewicz Hiding that is something else than just reorganising your code
0
Q: setting variable value using two macros in C++

snowdenI have a code block like this: #ifdef AB int value = 5; else int value = 10; #endif #ifdef CD int value = 9; else int value 11; #endif But now my problem is, if both AB and CD macros are active, the value is set to 9. I have two projects in same solution. one uses AB and ano...

lolwut
so I compiled Clang with MSVC and it can't compile a try statement.
You need to provide opaque types and use more indirection
Also it's not worth it
Xeo
Xeo
@Abyx Exceptions on Windows still broken?
12:43
You should probably make GlishaState opaque anyway
no thanks not today
cc1plus.exe: internal compiler error: Segmentation fault
libbacktrace could not find executable to open
Please submit a full bug report,
with preprocessed source if appropriate.
See <http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw-w64> for instructions.
womp womp womp
Xeo
Xeo
hahaha
12:44
what about that
type is not enough
Xeo
Xeo
Are you an artist perchance, Robot?
It's just a weak alias, it doesn't hide anything
12:45
I wish I had a decent refactoring tool for this
@Xeo sort of. it says ostream:800:3: error: cannot compile this try statement yet
maybe I should try HaRe
> .c++
@Jefffrey Look at his current gravatar.
@CatPlusPlus but... newtype Glisha us a = UnsafeGlisha { runGlisha :: GlishaInner us a wt } means that the Glisha monad is itself opaque; the constructor is not exported. Wouldn't that be enough? It just needs wt present as a type (and not a type variable on Glisha itself) and hence why the modules that define parts of it beforehand
12:46
I know, I know. :<
@snowden: You're welcome, Edward. — Lightness Races in Orbit 1 min ago
me so funnies
it sounds fucking terrible because I theoretically need an additional module per external lib just to typedef the fucking internal type to make it usable later
but then again, if I wrote the wrappers myself, I'd need those files anyway, right?
or I could fuck all that and just hide the exports
Make an opaque Driver type that has whatever vendor ops you need from the windowing/whatever lib
oh, that sounds nicely.
0
Q: Using out parameters of a C Function in Haskell

OmnipotentEntityI have functions that do the following sort of thing. CStructType* foo; int result = someFunctionThatAllocsFooAsOutput(&a); The first thing that comes to mind after reading around about this stuff is: -- Standard binding done elsewhere data CStructType = CStructType { -- Stuff here } derivi...

> result <- alloca $ \cstruct -> someFunction cstruct
12:50
Make an existential Handle type to get the native shit in it
Make makeGlisha function to take a driver and return an opaque monadic context
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Currently looking for the comic
And then you can not import GLFW or whatever in user code probably
Well directly at least, whatever defines Driver will need to import it anyway
But the core should be driver-agnostic
existential types look like they could solve a bit of my problems
@CatPlusPlus that would require opaque interfaces for every possible outsorced component
and I am not doing that.
@BartekBanachewicz Yes
it's too much hassle.
12:52
It's exactly equivalent of doing virtual interfaces in C++ or whateve
11 mins ago, by Cat Plus Plus
Also it's not worth it
Just write the thing using exactly those things and worry about abstraction maybe later
Overabstraction is also scope creep
@CatPlusPlus that was the plan. But I thought that maybe possible I could separate that to "exported" and "not-exported" modules somehoew
Cannot use record selector 'window' as a function due to escaped type variables
fuck that.

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