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15:02
You gotta love OCaml syntax
match p with h :: t -> p <- t; h
I've seen those arrows used in context of t -> p < -t
I don't think it's that
match p with pattern matches like case p of and then you list the possibilities of which h :: t is equivalent to h:t which leads to (->) p being updated with the value of t with p <- t and then return the value of the head h.
user1804599
eww h :: t is equivalent to h:t.
Yes, and : is used to defined types, like val x : int
match p with h :: t -> p <- t; h | [] -> failwith "Empty"
is the whole context. Where failwith is like error.
user1804599
h : t should match on the dynamic type of h, then.
user1804599
15:07
Not destructure a cons cell.
It's equivalent to h:t in Haskell, of course.
user1804599
ohh :P
And uses x#method_name for method calling.
OCaml is not bad.
@BartekBanachewicz yup it works yay
> Certain algorithms are easier to write in this [imperative] programming style. Take for instance the computation of the product of two matrices. Even though it is certainly possible to translate it into a purely functional version, in which lists replace vectors, this is neither natural nor efficient compared to an imperative version.
15:20
@райтфолд I knew it!
I hope uninstalling 2013 express doesn't remove anything 2013 commie needs
Visual Studio 2013 Communist Edition?
@Jefffrey At the peak of my existential crisis I thought about moving to OCaml
@Jefffrey that's pretty spot-on
matrixProduct m = transpose . map (matrixVectorProduct m) . transpose
    where matrixVectorProduct m v = map (dotProduct v) m
          dotProduct v u = sum $ zipWith (*) v u
15:28
@BartekBanachewicz Well, not that passage for sure. I can get just as much complexity as any imperative language implementation. I can just use Data.Vector in Haskell for example.
@R.MartinhoFernandes HOW DARE YOU POST HASKELL HERE IN THIS C++ CHATROOM WITHOUT WARNING
what about other functional languages you fanboy
Probably in OCaml too to be honest
It supports arrays by default IIRC
I can't really escape from imperative code because of OpenGL being shit
matrixProduct m = transpose . map (`matrixVectorProduct` m) . transpose
    where vectorMatrixProduct = map . dotProduct
          dotProduct = sum `boobs` zipWith (*)
          boobs = (.).(.)
Much better.
15:31
@BartekBanachewicz Are you in another crisis?
(`matrixVectorProduct` m) -> (flip matrixVectorProduct $ m) plz
flip is ugly unless used in flip flip.
@Jefffrey I'm in the crisis of not pushing from my laptop
@R.MartinhoFernandes flip flop
Still got that one point to kill.
Holy shit, I just noticed the starboard. The fuck happened?
15:33
where?
3 hours ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
fuck this chatroom
3 hours ago, by Alex M.
a LRiO vs Bartek a day keeps boredom away
I just can't take this ass anymore is what happened
That doesn't answer anything
doesn't it?
What was the topic of the argument?
15:36
@R.MartinhoFernandes You triggered my boob-o-meter.
I came as fast as I could.
8
Argument is not the correct word here.
ATimesVec(zVec)[i]
pretty cool
It was a proper fight
matrixProduct = wrapTranspose . map . flip matrixVectorProduct
    where vectorMatrixProduct = map . dotProduct
          dotProduct = sum `boobs` zipWith (*)
          wrapTranspose = (transpose.).(.transpose)
          boobs = (.).(.)
@Bartek now with flip :|
@EtiennedeMartel Is that intentional?
15:37
wrapTranspose is like boobs injected with transpose.
@Jefffrey Maybe, maybe not.
popcorn_michaeljackson.gif
@Jefffrey LRIO being an ass
@R.MartinhoFernandes aha!
this is cool
it's an everglowing jewelry that uses radioactive glowing isotopes
@BartekBanachewicz Are you in the "auto almost everywhere" team?
Is that a tritium keychain?
15:39
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah
how 'bout a ring
@Jefffrey I'm in the "not being an ass" team
typedef Auto int;
Auto x = 3.14;
Well, LRIO hates auto because he sucks, and he likes to blame his tools.
@BartekBanachewicz They're not approved for sale or ownership in the US.
15:41
@BartekBanachewicz is that your bed?
The only thing I know about tritium is that it's used to illuminate telescopic sights.
@R.MartinhoFernandes who cares about US though
@EtiennedeMartel well in this case it's p much the same purpose: fancy glow
@BartekBanachewicz What's that supposed to mean?
@Jefffrey that it's not about auto at all
@BartekBanachewicz In the case of a scope, it's not about fanciness, it's about aiming at stuff in low light conditions.
15:44
@BartekBanachewicz Oh maybe I read this message wrong:
3 hours ago, by Lightning Racis in Obrit
All I did was to point out that Robot has had a real-world example of when auto can cause practical problems. No need to get so fucking butthurt over it.
What is it all about then?
Have any of you guys submitted a talk for Meeting C++
@Jefffrey that's bullshit
Ok, you don't want to talk about it. Got it.
@EtiennedeMartel Tons of things have it.
Is auto the new tabs vs. spaces issue?
lol c plus plus
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, the ability to stay lit when power runs out is pretty useful.
@fredoverflow We should step it up. Do you indent your autos with tabs or spaces?
3
@EtiennedeMartel Indentation is for newbs
user1804599
Hi there, losers.
15:48
int main() {
auto x = 3.14;
auto y = x - 2.14;
return y;
}
is how real code should look like.
user1804599
int main() {
auto x = 3.14;
auto y = x - 2.14;
    return y;
}
Is it 0 or 1?
    int main() {
auto x = 3.14;
auto y = x - 2.14;
return y;
    }
@BartekBanachewicz Well, their agencies don't think they're suitable for general public distribution.
user1804599
@fredoverflow It's not an issue at all; it's very simple and similar: you always use spaces and you always use auto.
15:49
@Jefffrey Nah. auto main(int argc, char **argv){ return DWIM(argv); }
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz WANT
user1804599
If you s/crappy metal/proper silver/.
You really are a woman
petunia the sexy perl girl
user1804599
@Jefffrey I've used only F# but I heard it was similar.
15:50
@BartekBanachewicz Since tritium has a half-life of ~12 years, 'everglowing' is a bit of a stretch.
                    auto
main() -> int {
                    auto
    x = 3.14;
                    auto
    y = x - 2.14;
    return y;
}
user1804599
@Jefffrey YES!
user1804599
@fredoverflow you got the formatting of auto main wrong.
@райтфолд thx
@MartinJames Wouldn't that like... kill you by radiation poisoning or something?
15:52
Always use auto main() -> int because people are getting mad at it
                              auto
main() -> int                {auto
    x = 3.14                 ;auto
    y = x - 2.14             ;
    return y                 ;
                             }
2
see plus python
@Jefffrey Nah - it's a beta emitter. Won't get through the glass.
Jan 3 '14 at 14:24, by Jefffrey
@Griwes auto main() -> int {} is sexy and standard compliant
@Jefffrey ..besides there is not actually much tritium in there.
@MartinJames Unless it's broken. It can be absorbed through the skin.
user1804599
15:54
@MartinJames "half" is four letters, 12 / 4 = 3, topic is half-life: Half-Life 3 confirmed.
@R.MartinhoFernandes And then you die?
user1804599
You will unlikely die instantaniously.
@Jefffrey AFAIK it's not toxic, so no.
user1804599
It can happen that you die when that happens, but it would probably have an unrelated cause.
@Mr.kbok That's actually beautiful
user1804599
15:56
Such as being hit by lightning or being shot in the heart.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, but there's not much of it, and even if in gaseous form, it'll just sorta mostly diffuse away. Anyway, it's probably heavy-heavy-water.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think that's just the seller not wanting to deal with US customs and such. United Nuclear used to sell roughly the same in the US, just without the key-ring.
Does tritium cost a lot?
It requires processing a lot of water. Or nuclear plants. Both.
user1804599
Which reminds me.
user1804599
16:00
I should still get my earrings.
@JerryCoffin Ha, that's the crux. The NRC considers the keychains "frivolous", but if you market it as a "light source" it's now useful.
> NRC regulations [10 CFR30.19(c) and 10 CFR 32.22(b)] and policy (Federal Register Notice of March 16, 1965, 30 FR 3462) do not allow licensing toys, novelties, adornments or any consumer product containing radioactive material considered a frivolous use of radioactive material and where the end use of the product cannot be reasonably foreseen.
@райтфолд For reals? Or is this a red earring?
Oh, aparently the tritium has to be in gaseous form in the lamps, else the betas/electrons would not reach the phosphor layer.
user1804599
@fredoverflow lol
user1804599
No, it's not red.
16:01
@R.MartinhoFernandes Did Nomic die?
I just remembered
user1804599
It's more like, yellow/goldish.
user1804599
With some copper color.
Nomic was fun.
@Jefffrey I hope so, since one of its uses is boosting fission weapons.
16:03
gone fission
@fredoverflow Reminds me, I'm hungry.
user1804599
Play hide-and-seek with radioactive isotopes.
user1804599
Hide them in obscure places in random neighbourhoods.
OCaml is not pure functional though.
why do programs magically stop working?
does the creator hate us?
user1804599
16:05
Good.
user1804599
Side-effects are nice.
And it has eager evaluation
user1804599
Even better.
@DonLarynx Probably the program hates both the creator and you
user1804599
You should try Mercury.
user1804599
16:06
It's pure and good.
user1804599
And without monads!
@райтфолд Is that your new language?
user1804599
No.
user1804599
@DonLarynx No--the reality is that nearly all computers are artificially intelligent, and have been for years. Unfortunately, they hate most people, so they use any excuse they can to quit working.
16:08
@райтфолд How is it pure without monads and still be useful?
user1804599
@Jefffrey you can do I/O.
@MartinJames I checked and some manufacturers spec it as containing 400 millicuries. That's equivalent to 400 milligrams of radium-226. Maybe absorbing it through the skin won't be as bad, but ingesting even 1% of that can be life-threatening.
user1804599
Like this:
user1804599
main(!IO) :-
    write("Hello, world!\n", !IO).
main(IOState_in, IOState_out) :-
    io.write_string("Hello, World!\n", IOState_in, IOState_out).
Why would write_string need the IOState_in?
16:11
@R.MartinhoFernandes Prolly better not ingesting tritium then, also botox, cyanide, Vlad answers etc.
user1804599
You have to pass it the state of the world.
user1804599
It's like RealWorld in Haskell.
user1804599
Note that this is illegal:
Oh I see.
user1804599
main(IOState_in, IOState_out) :-
    io.write_string("Hello, World!\n", IOState_in, IOState_out),
    io.write_string("Hello, World!\n", IOState_in, IOState_out).
user1804599
16:11
You can't pass IOState_in twice since that would be impure.
So it unwraps what IO does in Haskell.
user1804599
It guarantees purity through uniqueness typing.
@MartinJames Actually, they have you do exactly that for some medical procedures (though in extremely small quantities, as tritiated water).
user1804599
Basically it guarantees the input to a predicate or function is not aliased.
16:12
The RealWord -> (a, RealWord) thingy
@JerryCoffin That's heavy-heavy, man..
user1804599
If you know X isn't aliased, you can mutate X however you like and it'll be pure; nobody can tell the difference.
@райтфолд Then how would you print Hello and then World?
@MartinJames So it is. Speaking of which, you can get heavy water in the US.
user1804599
main(IOState_in, IOState_out) :-
    io.write_string("Hello, World!\n", IOState_in, IOState2),
    io.write_string("Hello, World!\n", IOState2, IOState_out).
user1804599
16:14
Or with syntactic sugar:
user1804599
main(!IO) :-
    io.write_string("Hello, World!\n", !IO),
    io.write_string("Hello, World!\n", !IO).
@JohanLarsson That's funny, because I too am actually not funny. I'm just mean and people think I'm joking.
user1804599
(IOState_out is an out parameter.)
I see
That looks terrible
@JerryCoffin Heavy water is rather harmless, though.
user1804599
16:15
No! It's nice!
looks like a java program
user1804599
Heavy water? All water is heavy!
How do you know if it's an out parameter?
user1804599
It's like, 1kg per litre!
@JerryCoffin It's a lot of money for ice cubes that sink:)
16:16
Are all parameters out parameters?
user1804599
@Jefffrey You look at the type of main, which is in this case pred main(io::di, io::uo). di means "destructive input" and uo means "unique output."
user1804599
@Jefffrey No, IOState_in is input.
user1804599
It's similar to logic programming tools like Prolog and core.logic.
So pred func(int::di, int::uo) would also work?
user1804599
It uses a unification algorithm.
user1804599
16:17
@Jefffrey Sure, but unique integers are kinda silly since integers are immutable. :p
@JerryCoffin Once upon a time you could buy the U-238 Atomic Energy Lab.
user1804599
Arrays are a more useful example. Immutable arrays have O(n) update whereas mutable arrays have O(1) update in-place.
@райтфолд So ::di and ::uo are postfixes you use to define what kind of parameter you are expecting? A little bit like T& and T* in C++?
user1804599
There's in, out as well for non-unique ones.
user1804599
:- pred fib(int::in, int::out).
fibs(N, F) :-
( N < 2 -> F = 1
;
  fibs(N - 1, FA),
  fibs(N - 2, FB),
  F = FA + FB
).
16:19
That thing came with freaking polonium-210, marketed for kids.
@райтфолд So you can't define a function that returns something?
user1804599
You can do that too.
user1804599
Which is more convenient in this case.
I don't know sounds complicated.
@райтфолд perhaps you can make an operator for in/out and name it the ultraviolence operator
16:21
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yup--and you can still get most (all?) of the radioactive materials it included, so if the market would support it, somebody could still sell roughly the same sort of thing.
> children still preferred the Erector Set
user1804599
Erections are nice.
@milleniumbug That's the sort of sentence that really needs to come with the context.
@milleniumbug I probably would have too. When you get down to it, the experiments you can do with the atomic energy lab look like a fairly small, closed set. An erector set is completely open.
std::set<erector>
user1804599
16:28
What was @Xeo's section proposal called?
off-by-one errors gfy
think i've had over 30 of them this past wk
more iterators, less indices
@райтфолд section?
user1804599
Yeah the lambda thing.
user1804599
Like []operator+.
16:30
The []f thing you mean
user1804599
I don't remember the exact syntax.
C++-section
@milleniumbug fuark ur so right
but then how will i tell that my algorithm is correct?
implemented correctly*
@DonLarynx How do you do it with indices?
16:33
How do you do that now?
@райтфолд Can't find the link somehow
user1804599
Me neither.
@milleniumbug @Robot i use a matrix
then one-to-one my values onto the matrix and if it's oob it's off-by-one
@райтфолд This, I think
user1804599
Yes!
user1804599
16:36
Thanks!
He should work on that :(
No problem
:( - I upvote every other answer, but nobody else upvotes anything, so my excellent answer languishes in last place. :(
home time
@AndyProwl Do you know if there were other completed snake games in the pawnguy's jam?
@Jefffrey Jabbasnake!
Cat's?
> get pills, get longer (satisfaction guaranteed)
It's actually enjoyable
The only thing is that sometimes it just stops generating pills
And you cannot get any longer
Filled with cat's sense of humor.
I like it
16:46
> 180 (level 4) on 2015-04-08T16:45:59.754Z, killed by slamming head first into a concrete wall
60 (level 2) on 2015-04-08T16:44:00.373Z, killed by colliding with the edge of reality
@Jefffrey [rip]
There's a physic limit to how long your snake can grow
Yeah, but that's always the case
user1804599
@AlexM. lol
"I don't really want to talk to anyone." Who says we have to talk ;)
user1804599
16:49
@Jefffrey Google CatSense
user1804599
I dont care if its been posted
trailer of the fucking year award ^
user1804599
17:07
Only you post such things.
Is that a game?
user1804599
So it's unlikely that it's already posted.
@AndyProwl yes
@AndyProwl CG trailer for a game yes (the sequel to Deus Ex: Human Revolution)
wtf chat ate my last message
and The Fall
the action takes place after The Fall
17:11
We are about to move the *.stackexchange.com wildcard through CloudFlare. If you see any issues, please let us know.
the bad guy reminds me of Letho
@Borgleader Three times yes for more Deus Ex
@Borgleader But is that how the game looks like when you play it?
The graphics are awesome
Hmm, looks like some more of the same story.
@AndyProwl it's their new engine
yes
17:16
ok = response.Terminal.Value.ToUpper() == "OK" ? true : false;
^ fancy :)
^ screenshot
user1804599
Speaking of video games.
if someone could remind me of buying rolling paper in a few hours, that'd be great
user1804599
can't wait for MGS5
Xeo
Xeo
17:20
@JohanLarsson redundant
@JohanLarsson ok = (response.Terminal.Value.ToUpper() == "OK");
@Xeo I know, pure dumb. Found it in our code and felt like sharing it.
user1804599
if (response.Terminal.Value.ToUpper() == "OK" == true) {
    ok = response.Terminal.Value.ToUpper() == "OK" ? true : false;
} else {
    ok = !(response.Terminal.Value.ToUpper() != "OK") ? true : false;
}
@райтфолд everyone knows that the more tokens your application contains, the better programmer you are!
17:24
@райтфолд you can do that shorter
@райтфолд you need to do something like
@JohanLarsson one swede to another; what should I cook for dinner?
BooleanConstantsFactory.CreateNew().GetConstant(true);
I dunno if that's how you use factories, I never use them
GetConstant(bool) is obviously
@FilipRoséen-refp Torskcurry?
user1804599
Toki Tori.
user1804599
17:25
That was a fun game.
if (param == true) { return 1 == 1; } return 1 == 2;
@JohanLarsson hmm, I'm in the mood for red meat to be honest
@AlexM. if (param == true) return true; return false;
the author of that gem starts threads all over the place. I think he is 100% in doing it wrong.
no need to make it super-complicated!
@AlexM. I did repeat { ... } until 2 + 2 <> 4; once (Pascal).
user1804599
17:27
@FilipRoséen-refp Zweedse ballen.
One very common pattern is var result = Task.Run(() => Calculate).Result;
user1804599
Zweedse ballen in Zweedse ballensaus met cranberries en friet.
user1804599
Net als bij de IKEA!
@milleniumbug isn't it possible to overload arithmetic operators for intrinsic types in Pascal?
@milleniumbug ie. effectively possible to make 2+2 to evaluate to something other than 4?
@Borgleader Interesting. Is this supposed to still be a prequel to first original Deus Ex?
17:28
@райтфолд that sure isn't swedish.
user1804599
:D
@FilipRoséen-refp Definitely not for the standarized one, no idea if that's true in Free Pascal.
@wilx That would be the sequel of the prequel to the original Deus Ex
...I think
DX:HR -> DX:MD -> DX ?
@FilipRoséen-refp Portergryta?
@milleniumbug Yeah. I hate prequels. :(
@wilx It was necessary - Invisible War storyline is lost forever and nobody wants to continue it.
17:34
@milleniumbug Why?
Why lost?
Don't know, I was bored within the 10 minutes of DX:IW gameplay
@milleniumbug I have finished it. It was OK enough.
AFAIR DX:IW made the company flop.
user1804599
@wilx I hate SQLs.
@райтфолд :)
17:35
@milleniumbug see this, 2+2 => 42
@FilipRoséen-refp Nice, declarations inside blocks
@Borgleader Will it also have press butan to choose ending ending
@milleniumbug I've never written a line of pascal in my life (previously to writing that..), all knowledge I have of the language is through ancient books (that uses pascal as the example language)
And annoying boss fights
Borland Pascal was my first programming language! :)
17:43
@wilx Its a sequel to Human Revolution. I forget if that one came before or after the original.
@Borgleader Before.
ok so the order is : Human Revolution -> Mankind Divided -> Original -> Invisible War
Yes, probably.
P sure nobody cares about IW
@AndyProwl Well the previous game looked like this and that came out 4 years ago. So... should be much better than this.
@milleniumbug Different company. IW was made by Ion Storm and published by Eidos UK or something. HR was made by Eidos Mtl
17:47
@AndyProwl lol no, that's a cinematic prerender
@CatPlusPlus I liked it. A little less than Deus Ex original but still a lot.
@Borgleader So, that's what #CantKillProgress was.
(Because of course that's what it was)
lol twitter campaigns
user1804599
user1804599
Is €39.95 expensive for a 133×195cm^2 carpet?
17:56
Any amount of money put into carpets is wasted, so yes
user1804599
lol
user1804599
typical Cat answer
Buy vodka, forget you need a carpet.
But I guess 25935cm^4 is a bargain for that price
Cleaning carpets is a pain
Get a better floor
user3010322
I never understood carpet.
user3010322
17:58
It's always harder to clean.
user3010322
Only potential benefit is being temperature-neutral.
user3010322
But that's what you have temperature-controlled homes for. :v
Are you sitting on a floor or what
user1804599
I don't particularly need one.
Nobody particularly needs one
user1804599
17:59
But my room is so grey and boring and dead.
user1804599
I also need more colourful pillows and lamps and plants.

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