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10:00
@StackedCrooked You should, yeah.
&typeid( int ) == &typeid( int ) is not guaranteed by the standard.
typeindex( typeid( int ) ) == typeindex( typeid( int ) ) is.
Is it possible to "tear apart" a value into its pieces in OCaml / Haskell?
user1804599
@StackedCrooked Variant in cpp file, pimpl in header.
user1804599
@ThePhD Yes, with pattern matching.
Well, yes.
I have a...
type prog =
	| Prog of decl list
user1804599
For example, to tear apart a pair, you can use pattern matching: let pair = (0, "") in case pair of { (n, s) -> ... }.
But when I try to pass a value of type prog to something that matches on decl list, it freaks out.
I have to accept Prog first, and then pass it to the decl_list function.
user1804599
10:04
Indeed.
user1804599
prog and decl list are distinct types.
RIP.
user1804599
If you want them to be the same type, write type prog = decl list.
Ven
Ven
@rightfold lol using {} after of
P R O G R E S S B O Y S
user1804599
10:07
If you want to unpack first, write f (let Prog l = p in l).
Lookit that. A function declaration. I'M SO HAPPEH.
@ThePhD What about the read-only file system error?
@wilx That's because this is a shared folder to windows on a VBox.
@ThePhD because that's a nominal type, not an alias
Ven
Ven
L)
10:09
It can't create a symlink from lepix.native to ../lepix and have it be an executable.
@ThePhD have you by any chance read any like, book tutorial, anything before starting writing code?
because it seems you're just trying random things until the thing compiles
Reading.
@ThePhD Call me when you can do recursive functions. :D
In all seriousness, I am reading. It's not like these "docs" are really helpful, though.
"See: {name of function in C++ API}" Thanks for the help, docs. I APPRECIATE IT.
Luckily there's a semi-decent tutorial here for how to use the LLVM stuff.
@ThePhD \o/
Now im going to leave for work, before you revive my desire to make a language.
10:13
@Borgleader I have room for a Project Course next semester.
I'd like to make a really nice Graphical Language with you, if you want. :D:D:D:D
hnnng, i envy you so much
but srsly, gotta go to work now :P
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD EleGiggle
Fiiine.
Toodles.
urgh I'm trying to order electronic parts
but our stupid auction website limits the size of the shopping basket to 20
user1804599
10:31
XD
Please remove all those kludges related to your old linker error. They're irrelevant here. I'm not at all flattered by being referenced in top of some 200 lines of horrible template diarrhea that I most definitely never wrote. Here's what I showed you instead. — sehe 9 secs ago
What is the formal name for the list of parameters at the declaration / definition site of a function?
Is it parameters, or arguments?
IIRC it was parameters, and arguments were the values used to call a function.
Ven
Ven
correct
10:49
well maybe for lounge in general
11:02
if you feel that C++ templates are an annoying clusterfuck and you want more complex compile-time behaviour, this might be a language just for you
WOW. This is actually the most scary @internetofshit story I've seen to date #ioTsecurity. This is quite disturbing https://twitter.com/ErrataRob/status/799556482719162368
12
Ooof. I never imagined things to be quite this bad
Ven
Ven
11:35
@sehe ._.
@BartekBanachewicz actually it seems nicer
except for the context shit
@Ven what do you mean?
Ell
Ell
@sehe this is terrifying
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz well the fact you switch between contexts all the time is not very explicit
@Ven oh you mean between compiletime and runtime code?
I guess that's both a benefit and a drawback
Ven
Ven
if that's correctly what the docs call "lua context" and "terra context" [and I gather it is], yes
11:39
Buh. This is getting harder.
Tracking temporaries for expressions...
@Ven well, the "lua context" is ran at compile time, if you can call that compiletime even
the language doesn't need to follow the classic compilation model
Ven
Ven
i just don't understand the separation between lua context and terra context
@Ven Well, you start off in Lua. You can write Lua code like it was a lua program. Now, you can also call functions from "terra library"
for example, you can construct, compile and execute a terra block, or save it as a binary object file
Those binary object files can then be executed without the lua running at all, if you need/want that.
Can you just have if, whiles, fors and other statements sitting out in a namespace?
Or is it only declarations?
IIRC it was only declarations and initializers and crap.
@ThePhD what language now?
11:42
C++
IIRC that stuff is illegal...
then I don't understand the question
Ven
Ven
huh
do you mean not declaring a namespace in a if?
No, I meant
if (crap) { ... } in the global namespace, while not being in a function.
Ven
Ven
oh. Then no, you can't.
Guess there wouldn't be too much use for something like that...
11:43
@Ven basically lua context is a lua program that can dynamically construct, compile and execute terra code, and is similar to having a compiler shell open. You can execute your code directly that way, or you can just use it to metaprogram regular binaries
@ThePhD why. That's an XY.
@BartekBanachewicz Was just wondering purely for language's sake, honestly.
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz guess I should learn about Terra because this doesn't make much sense
@Ven I can try to be more specific if you tell me what part is unclear :P
maybe what's throwing you off is the fact that there's no one way to use Terra
it has a flexible execution setup and can be used in a multitude of ways
Ven
Ven
so you can mash lua and this low-level terra language in a single program file
yes.
@Ven then you can either treat that as a "script" and interpret it directly when running (thus being able to JIT), or you treat that as a "source" and when you "build", you run the lua code once and then the resulting binary doesn't have the compiler and Lua, just your native code
11:47
it looks like a fancy preprocessor
that's one way to look at it, yes.
Ven
Ven
so lua is the preprocessor and terra the language
you interpret the lua, get code that's terra-only, and compile that
@Ven that's one of the scenarios, if your goal is to get a raw binary
The thing that makes it really powerful is that you can actually build the code and run it while still staying in the Lua context
God this is so fucking dumb.
IOW your program can keep recompiling parts of itself while running as a Lua script
11:49
In any other language I'd just have stack<variables> and that'd be my local map.
@ThePhD "any", being "any language I know, which is C++"?
Ell
Ell
Terra looks gross to me
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD what is
@BartekBanachewicz C/C++/Java/C#, even PHP for fuck's sake.
11:50
@ThePhD wow man that's like 5
and they're all object-oriented imperative languages from the same family
who would've thought
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz well, the metaprogramming looks very explicit
@Ell well, that's because it is. It has a much lower-level metaprogramming than most languages
Ell
Ell
It looks a lot like you're writing against a compiler api
that's an apt analogy
you get quite a lot of support for doing that though
Ell
Ell
Yeah, I don't like the look of that "low level metaprogramming", I don't see the advantage
11:52
Maybe I'll make a list of maps, and then prepend a new map to the list for each new scope, and then throw one map off the front of the list at the end of the scope.
@Ell I think one look at complex template code in C++ should make the advantage obvious. For one, making meta-libraries makes way more sense in Terra imho.
Ugh, but I can't take a reference to these values this si so wrhahgahgh.
You can build higher-level meta-api yourself.
@ThePhD In reality it's going to be a tree.
(And not just a list.)
Sure, stuff like enable_if_t try to do that as well but that's still a league below.
11:53
@Griwes A tree?
@ThePhD Yes - the same "higher" scope can be a "parent" scope for multiple "lower" scopes.
I'm only traversing one part of the tree at a time.
{
    int a;
    {
        int b;
    }
    {
        int c;
    }
}
So while the total thing may be a tree, in the reality at any given point it's a list.
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz well, I agree c++ isn't a great example of good looking metaprogramming
11:54
@ThePhD But you want to somewhat save the structure, right?
@Griwes I dunno, I just keep that as [a, b] and [a,c] (copying everything above)
if you store references only that's super light
@Griwes Not... really?
I mean. If I was writing an optimizing compiler, maybe?
Well - if you just look at the "head", or at the current leaf, then it's going to look like a list, but not really. :P
-- This is a stack of tables forming a stack of nested closures
type Closure = [TableRef]
Ven
Ven
stack of stacks
11:55
-- this is table data containing arguments
let argsTableData = Map.fromList $ zip (map Str names) args
-- we turn it into a regular, registered table
newCls <- makeNewTableWith argsTableData
-- and append it to the closure stack
let clsWithArgs = newCls : cls
@ThePhD So you're saying the order of declarations will fully matter in your language? :P
@Griwes The order of scopes will fully matter in the language.
The scope for int c can't see the scope of int b, and vice-versa.
So I can't write function foo() { bar(); } function bar() {}?
You can write that: bar is in the same scope as foo.
Okay; we agree then.
Notice I said "somewhat save", not "save". :P
11:57
@Griwes if you treat the scope as a table and keep a list of scopes, just like I do in Turnip, that's entirely possible
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD what you really want to do is abstract away the "name"s of things
altough if there's a better way I'm all ears
Ell
Ell
So you only have to write refresh once
@BartekBanachewicz I have a paper I can link when I get home
They have a "freshness" monad
You'll kind of end up with what I have for Vapor. A "family" of lists that are traversable "upwards", but that thing is really a tree.
Ell
Ell
Inside it you can rename variables freely
11:58
@ThePhD I agree that the distinction isn't particularly important and borders on language lawyering.
Implementing this is killing me though.
@ThePhD One difference between what you're describing and what I have is that I don't really "pop" from the "list" - as I recurse into things, those things create their own scopes referencing their parent scopes, never modifying the original scopes passed to them.
@ThePhD make a custom monad :P
@Ell I was actually supposed to make a monad for that but I never got around to it
so I'm passing those things manually like a fucking animal
Guh. And I don't know how to save names from the expression builder with LLVM. Like, some expressions I don't think I want to save to a name first.
E.g., 24 isn't something I'd give a name to, I don't think...
But for a function call I don't know how to label an expression as a non-temporary and then generate a name for it, and otherwise don't, and...
.... Eeuehgegiguegheghgh.
@ThePhD Why would you give it a name?
12:03
@Griwes For something like a function call.
From what I've found, you need to differentiate between (1) expressions, (2) variables and (3) symbols.
"Save all the arguments in temps. Then call the function with all the temps."
But the literal 24 isn't really worth saving in a temp.
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD push arg; push arg; push arg; call foo 3
@ThePhD it is. also do copies for the temps!
@ThePhD You're generating LLVM IR, right?
@Ven LLVM is, unfortunately, not stack-based.
If LLVM was stack-based man this would be piss-easy.
12:04
call i32 (i8*, ...)* @printf(i8* %msg, i32 12, i8 42)        ; yields i32
Ven
Ven
ah sorry. never touched llvm :P.
From the docs.
You can literally say i32 24 in the function call instruction.
Ven
Ven
@Griwes that doesn't help him tho
...how does it not help him
Yeah, I'm not vomiting out the text directly. I actualyl wish I was, but it's mandated we use teh OCaml LLVM API.
12:05
lol
If I was vomiting out text I'd be so done. .-.
Ven
Ven
he needs to teach the codegen not to generate a temporary
that's the only difficult part
I dunno about the API, but I'm 100% sure there's a way to make it write i32 24 there.
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD get rekt
I think I'll just generate a temporary for now and then consider this an "optimization" for later.
Ven
Ven
12:06
because it is, as I said
@Griwes There is, I just don't know how to make my code do it proper.
@ThePhD Well, if you just do:
Ven
Ven
^ famous last words.
%0 = i32 24 ; or whatever is the right syntax
call foo(%0)
That should also work (and LLVM should trivially do the right thing there).
But that's stupid. :P
Yeah, I think I can generate that no problem.
Ven
Ven
12:09
@Griwes stupid is the best course of action when you got 3 days left. ;-)
I'd assume that if you can build %0 = i32 24, you can use the same part of the API (the one that generates RHS of that) to generate an argument for the function call.
Okay, lunch time.
Holy shit it's 7 in the morning.
Ven
Ven
no it's 1pm
This is too hard.
I want my imperative programming back.
I don't like functional heeby jeebies.
user1804599
12:24
@ThePhD 24 is a LLVM value, you don't have to name it
user1804599
You only have to name instructions.
@rightfold so how much harder is implementing a statically typed language
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz compared to?
you "just" have to write a type checker
to a dynamically typed language
@Ven can I have a statically typed language without a type checker?
I thought that's possible
Ven
Ven
if you don't have a type checker it's not typed
well maybe unityped
user1804599
12:27
@BartekBanachewicz depends on the type system
@Ven I can imagine a language where this would compile
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz depends on whether the result of type inference influences the program behavior, e.g. overloading or type classes
int a = 5;
string b = "test";

float c = a + b;
@rightfold mmm, right
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz then it's not statically typed
@ThePhD pathetic
12:28
@BartekBanachewicz ;~;
user1804599
(λx:t.x)y can be evaluated whether you type check it or not
user1804599
return 42 can't be evaluated if you don't type check it
Fucking
Everything
is immutable
Ven
Ven
good. less bugs.
why do people think this is an amazing paradigm
this is shit
user1804599
12:30
Yes, that's the point of functional programming.
I want to update the integer in in this tuple next to my map for fuck's sake
Ven
Ven
even if I'm writing in imperative/OO languages I'll always strive to have immutable things
user1804599
Because it gives you equational reasoning.
not dump the whole thing again fFWafawdwad
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD no you don't
user1804599
12:31
Many people don't like to think. This is why many people don't like functional programming.
Ven
Ven
^ that's absolutely retarded
nwp
nwp
@ThePhD You copy the whole thing and make a special case to not copy the integer at that position and instead put some other integer there. FP is so much fun :D
Yes, the less thinking you have to do and the more intuitive a system is the better.
Ven
Ven
You have an issue if you think "intuitive" is a term that's actually meaningful.
Seriously.
"It's [not] intuitive" is what you say when you're out of arguments to back up your point.
Well. It is the central idea behind "Pit of success". It might not be concrete but it is a strong guideline in general.
Functional programming is often very intuitive, so there's that.
12:35
Intuitive to a math major, maybe. .-.
Ven
Ven
Not for @ThePhD, apparently – and thus it's bad.
Or to people who put some effort into learning a functional programming language.
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD Oh cmon. I never even had maths in college. I stopped at high school (and was awful last year) and still it's not too hard.
OO is NOT intuitive. I remember having to re-read those chapters in Stroustrup several times.
Ven
Ven
^ this is what I'm arguing against. You're not making any sense.
whatever
12:36
Only when some time later I read about "template method pattern" the penny finally dropped lodged itself firmly in place.
Imperative stuff was easy for me to grok. Objects and whatever, not so much.
So. It's natural that when learning another paradigm you /also/ have to break that barrier down.
Ok. So it's imperative vs fp, not OO vs. fp. Makes more sense that way.
Ven
Ven
there's no "imperative vs fp"
haskell is probably the best imperative language I know
except Perl™ ;-)
Ew
It's more like "play-dough" vs. "lego". Do you want robust, non-altering building blocks, or do you want malleability and accidental shapes :)
Ven
Ven
I think both have their uses.
12:41
I suppose the FP purist will say it's statefulness. And they'd be right.
Ven
Ven
but then – I'm here because I lost most of everything :).
I personally think it's quite elitist to say that arguing from perspective ("It's less intuitive to me" is equal to "Doesn't make sense").
That's like saying the US2016 election "doesn't make sense.". It makes A LOT of sense.
@Ven Wait. What happened?
Ven
Ven
@sehe I have no idea why you're making that comparison with the US elections. I never said they didn't :P.
Shit.
I can't get away with not implementing scopes and variables now.
Because I need to import lib.print.
Ven
Ven
hahaha
12:43
@Ven Really? I just told you why I made that comparison.
Ven
Ven
@sehe no – you made the comparison and you argued about your own example. You didn't explain why you did so.
Again. It's not just about your opinion. Or at least, I hope not, if you care to talk about things.
Ven
Ven
@sehe Of course it's not (there's no discussion to be had if I go full Bartek)
I need to figure out some kind of variant structure and stuff for my map...
@Ven I said it exactly. "That's like saying". I think it's similar in vein. You didn't NEED to be saying that. Enough people are saying it, so it was a comparison readily available
@Ven :) It has been known to happen in the lounge
Ven
Ven
12:46
My point is that "intuitive" is not meaningful at all because it's totally subjective. Every person has a different experience and thus a different definition of what's "intuitive" for them.
Hence you can't call something good/bad for being "intuitive". Especially in programming when background plays such a role.
Anyhoops. I can get along with people who think imperative coding is more intuitive. I understand that point. I'm not saying it's valid, or rational. But it doesn't need to be
what is the best C++ lounge on SO doing this lovely day
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD's background is C++/C#/Java. That's why it's "intuitive".
user1804599
ugh, php segfaults
@Ven Things that are subjective are meaningful. Very. Hence my comparison to people opining about the irrationality of elections.
Ven
Ven
12:47
In this context, "intuitive" only means "in my comfort zone". And that's an issue.
Depends. If it's his personal opinion, he might learn. If he's going out infecting people with unnecessary bias against other paradigms, yeah.
Lol, me convincing anyone of anything about programming.
If I did that I'd be working on this project alone and not have 3 days to implement codegen. :V
nwp
nwp
The experiences are not that different. If you want to make a racing game you have some idea what a car looks like and what attributes it has. You also know that its position changes and being able to express that is intuitive, because we see cars changing position all the time. Saying you have to copy the car into a new position is unintuitive, nobody does that.
Ven
Ven
I have no idea what you're arguing about.
@sehe Yeah, but we need to see it for what it is.
"I found it intuitive". Ok. You said "OO is NOT intuitive." – that's a (wants-to-be) objective statemnet
nwp
nwp
I'm arguing that "intuitive" means something beyond "it happens to align with my experience which is totally different from everyone else's experience".
12:51
intuitive always felt more like subtly self-explaining to me
@Ven I'm happy not to be absolutist all the time. I'm not writing a book on CS here. The implied context is humans. And indeed, the very definition of intuitive makes it abundantly clear that this context applies. I think it's fiiiine
@AlexM. Whatever that means :)
kinda like
Afhawdwhf import statements, shit.
if you have this starting piece
Those aren't implemented in the language. WHATEVER, I'll just import EVERYTHING by default.
12:54
you can gradually tell how it would interact with others w/o going thru docs
and move from there
but experience is obv a factor
if people find sth to be intuitive you can be sure they saw something similar before
in programming or outside
OO is always intuitive because it models state and behavior similar to how we see it IRL
"objects have things and do things"
Ven
Ven
@sehe my issue is that @ThePhD uses it like it's an actual argument to shit on fp languages
5
ThePhD uses argumentum-ad-capitalization, enough said :)
@ThePhD because it is, you're just bad at it
@Ven +1
max
max
"objects abstract over state and sharing, providing you with data races for free"
"Give it to me, I'm worth it / Baby I'm worth it / Uh huh I'm worth it / Gimme gimme I'm worth it"
12:58
@max ;)
@ThePhD what language? Do you prefer delicious python? Where imports are effectful? My coworker spent the entire week figuring out why his uwsgi process deadlocked on the second worker that imported a specific module. Only in Python 3. Yay.
Well. The larger part.
man you guys didn't star the integer programming article I posted
it was interesting!
@sehe No I mean, the language I'm implementing. We don't have the import thing part of the parser at all, or the import file "", or import string "", or any of that...
@BartekBanachewicz lemme find it again
12:59
11 hours ago, by Alex M.
https://blog.remix.com/an-intro-to-integer-programming-for-engineers-simplified-‌​bus-scheduling-bd3d64895e92#.pgrutqyeh
So I can't just say "well let me hook into this import statement and then let the codegen run naturally from there".
Gotta put a big ol' hack in.

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