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23:00
5 mins ago, by ThePhD
Really, I'm looking for a small, passive trasmitter that I can embed in something and program / write specific data into. I then obviously need a specialized reader device.
C# doesn't have implicit deduction of what interfaces a class might be implementing, but I don't think I'd want it to have that.
Ell
Ell
@CatPlusPlus Why? Isn't that concepts?
If Haskell wants to preserve all type information then I assume it has no things like virtual function or function pointers. Does this mean slow compile times?
C# interfaces are a bit annoying
that combinatorial explosion...
@ThePhD this might be close to what you want
but what you want is not trivial
user142019
23:02
@StackedCrooked You can pass around functions, no need for function pointers.
hack a day is great
user142019
Though there are function pointers.
@rightfold No type erasure?
Type erasure from what to what
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Haskell only needs to pass a name around for functions
23:03
@CatPlusPlus Maybe I am repeating myself, but I like the idea of not having to make N types derive from the same interface in order to work generically with them. That's the kind of stuff pure OOP languages lead you to.
(Unless I'm saying BS)
user142019
You want duck-typing?
@Xeo Isn't it the same in (modern) C++?
Yes, and constraints
Interfaces are constraints.
Xeo
Xeo
@AndyProwl I like explicit interfaces, way saner than assuming interfaces and implementations from syntax.
user142019
23:04
AFAIK, you cannot do overloading without type classes.
What Xeo said.
Xeo
Xeo
Too bad it's not easy to do in C++
Ell
Ell
interfaces aren't constraints are they?
They don't limit waht you can do, just give a minimum
@Xeo So you can't bind objects in it?
Xeo
Xeo
Concept maps were kinda getting there (typeclass instances) but they've been dropped from what I know.
user142019
23:05
@Ell In C# you can use an interface as a constraint.
If your function takes IFoo then it can only use what IFoo exposes.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Nope?
You're passing a functor in C++, is likely what you mean.
user142019
void Foo<T>(T x, T y) where T : IWhatever, T : ISomethingElse { … }
a got compromise between implicit and explicit interfaces is being able to be able to declare variables as requireing multiple interfaces
@Xeo In my experience, interfaces require inheritance, and inheritance in OOP is flawed
23:05
without going all generic
Or I guess constraints would be even better yeah.
It does not allow expressing meaningful relationships between types
@thecoshman I don't mind if it's not trivial, just so long as it's doable, or even mildly expensive.
Interfaces don't require inheritance.
Xeo
Xeo
@AndyProwl Wrong kind of interface.
An "interface" is just your access to something.
Like, the public interface of a class
23:06
Also inheritance is not flawed, some people's use of inheritance is flawed.
Perhaps I am using the wrong term then?
user142019
"Interface" as in the I of API.
Xeo
Xeo
std::vector's public interface consists of push_back, reserve, size etc
@AndyProwl "Interface" is an overloaded word
user142019
Not "interface" as in public interface IDisposable.
@CatPlusPlus The more I use C#, the more I think the kind of inheritance in C#, Java, etc. is flawed
23:07
@rightfold That's the "interface" I was talking about
Xeo
Xeo
Yeah, but not the one we mean
@CodesInChaos There's only one "kind of inheritance" in OOP.
@Xeo I thought so
And it's inheritance.
So I don't know why would it be flawed in C#/Java specifically.
Xeo
Xeo
Btw, Haskell doesn't have that many typeclasses, does it?
23:08
Inheritance in C++ is exactly the same.
inheriting interfaces and inheriting implementations is quite different
@Xeo Anyone can write as many as they want you know.
C# doesn't allow you to cleanly separate these
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus Sure, but I meant "by default".
You don't inherit interfaces.
user142019
23:09
@Xeo You mean in the base package?
user142019
I don't like the base package. It needs a cleanup.
Xeo
Xeo
Ya, what comes with the language itself
(Taking whatever GHC provides as "the language")
Those are defined in Prelude.
@CatPlusPlus OK, for example: we all know Square cannot derive from Rectangle if Rectangle contains operations such as Stretch(). That's I assume what you mean when you say "people's use of inheritance is flawed"
@Xeo It's called Haskell. :v:
Xeo
Xeo
23:10
@CatPlusPlus GHC has quite some extensions to Haskell98 though, no?
Haskell2010 now. But no matter, Prelude is defined by the standard.
@ThePhD are you going this just for the fun of it?
Xeo
Xeo
Wokay.
(Though I think the Num superclass thing is not, but don't quote me on that)
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus Monad etc aren't part of Prelude as far as I'm aware.
23:11
@Xeo Monad is.
Functor too.
Xeo
Xeo
Oh, ok
Applicative isn't
Xeo
Xeo
Maybe I'm mixing things up
@thecoshman No, it's for someone.
They've lost the ability to do basic things (open doors, etc.)
@AndyProwl it's more that people tend to have a 'object' class, which is inherited by a 'shape' class, which is inherited by a 'square' class, which is inherited by a 'rectangle' class
23:13
I'm creating a small, secure passive transmitter I can give them on a keychain or bracelet, then installing readers in certain locations, then attaching those to things like doors to get them to auto-open.
@AndyProwl Well if you can't design your class hierarchy properly, then it's your fault, not OOP's.
Xeo
Xeo
Oh, yeah, you don't need Control.Monad for Monads if you have Prelude... never noticed.
user142019
@Xeo Approx 64 of them.
user142019
Desktop/base-4.6.0.1 [ grep '^class' -r . | wc -l                     ] 1:14 am
      64
@ThePhD traditional RFID will do that, it is as secure as you can keep the token. of course the token could be spoofed
any way, time to head to bed
23:14
@CatPlusPlus While I agree with you, I also believe in real-world situations design patterns like that normally tend to arise, but in a less obvious ways. And then you have to recur to dynamic downcasts and the like.
The way C# handles inheritance forces you to either write lots of boilerplate code, or to leak implementation details into the public surface area
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold That's quite manageable. I remember C++ concepts had a reaaally hard time keeping the number low.
if you want @ThePhD I can help you come up with a solution to this, just write up some exact requirements that are needed
night all!
Xeo
Xeo
(Before they scrapped everything I mean)
@CodesInChaos So how would you make it better?
I still have no idea what this discussion is really about.
23:15
golang solves this issue, but their implicit interfaces have different issues
Nevermind
@AndyProwl Fuck patterns. Also still your fault.
user142019
If you are being conscious about design patterns, you're doing it wrong.
Implicit interfaces don't solve the problem you think exists here.
user142019
They happen by accident because you may have designed your software well or not well.
23:16
@CatPlusPlus I'll trust you and get back to this when I'll have stronger arguments
I used null object this week
@CatPlusPlus It's not implicit interfaces that solve the problem. It's separating publicly visible inheritance structure from taking over another types fields and methods
I still feel that it's "my fault" only up to some point
(actually, I don't think it's my fault at all - but again, that might be because I'm not experienced enough)
Xeo
Xeo
Also, I really hope the concept study group reconsiders how classes implicitly model a concept based on syntax, and bring concept maps back :/
@CodesInChaos Some examples maybe.
Xeo
Xeo
23:19
Although I guess that won't happen because HOLY SHIT ALL THE CODE BREAKAGE
Also, keep in mind C# is partially designed to work well with IDEs and other analysis tools.
Explicit interfaces make things easier.
@Xeo I think Concepts-lite is as far as concepts need to go.
@CatPlusPlus There are cases where reusing another classes implementation would be nice
Xeo
Xeo
@GManNickG 'cept concepts lite isn't really... concepts.
@Xeo Right. :)
23:20
But reusing that implementation should not be visible to outsiders
@CodesInChaos This is either inheritance or composition, depending on relationship type, so what's the problem.
that you need lots of boilerplate code if you want two similar classes
If you need boilerplate code, then your design is probably shitty.
Esp if you have two classes with similar interfaces and sharing implementation.
Take Collection<T> in the .net framework.
It's only purpose is that it provides implementations for common collection methods
But to take advantage of that, you have to inherit from it, which is visible to outsiders
I was thinking of writing a web scaper and how I could need organize the downloaded data. Url paths are similar to file paths and the data in artist/album/song could be stored in directory artist/album/song. However, data is not always organizable like that. For example if the website is a recommendations generator based on a given list of preferences. (This reminds me of the multiple inheritance debate.)
23:24
@CodesInChaos And what's the problem? There's a clear is-a relationship.
@CatPlusPlus No, I just want to be a IList<T>.
Not a Collection<T>
You want what to be IList?
@CodesInChaos But IList<T> is a Collection<T>, is it not?
Your classes? Then don't inherit from Collection. Other's classes? Why do you care? You can still take IList and not know whether Collection<T> is used or not.
when you want a class that's an IList<T> you can either implement all its methods which is inconvenient/needs lots of boilerplate
Or you can inherit from Collection<T> which locks you into using it forever. Even if you want a different implementation later on.
23:27
@CodesInChaos "Even if you want a different implementation later on." Then go back to step one where you implement all its methods?
essentially what's lacking is some form of private inheritance
It's called composition.
@CatPlusPlus composition doesn't give on "is a IList<T>`
:cripes:
@CodesInChaos What?
23:28
Private inheritance is composition.
essentially what C# is lacking is some form of private inheritance that allows you to implicitly implement interfaces
user142019
inb4 Cat leaves again.
Composition is the answer here. However your language wants to help you do that is not fundamental to inheritance.
He wouldn't leave because of C# question, would he? :p
No, I just don't care about this conversation anymore.
23:29
Sorry I got this started
@CodesInChaos Okay, that's right. So what's the original point?
Wait, what
What do implicit interfaces have to do with this now.
user142019
All languages are equally bad, and some are badder than others. Case closed.
that many languages don't allow you to cleanly separate "I want to reuse x's implementation" and "It should be visible to everyone that I inherit from x"
It's called composition.
user142019
23:31
> I want to reuse x's implementation.
user142019
COPYPASTA
user142019
GLORIOUS MACROS
Generate all code using m4.
user142019
I generate Java code using Perl for my school project. xd
user142019
Input is read from a Python file. Works great.
23:34
Congrats, you're crazy. :toot:
user142019
Dankeschön.
user142019
It's better than editing constants everywhere.
user142019
HELLO WE MISSED YOu
23:39
The intention of reusable code never seems to work out.
It works out if you're not a baddie. :v:
I was talking about other people, silly.
As a general software developer you're always working in the context of some project. So your design will always be influenced by the needs for that particular project.
You never start with reusable code, unless you're specifically writing a library.
Heh? Isn't it the other way around?
Though what makes your code good in general will make it easy to repackage it into reusable thing.
No. YAGNI.
23:43
You start with nothing. All you have is your language stdlib. Which is reusable.
Well, I mean what you're writing, not what you're using.
Obviously you yourself should reuse as much as possible.
I'm glad I put my old library project in a namespace called Futile. That makes it less embarrassing today.
I'm gettin the hang of it.
I think.
user142019
Yay.
user142019
I answered a Haskell question.
user142019
A shitty one!
user142019
23:46
An ICANNOTRTFM one!
You lowered your standards?
What standards?
sub-standards
user142019
ISO standards
I Suck O.. standards?
I think the old guys did a good job. I think the design ideas of Unix are amazing.
Such modularity.
And the idea of creating only tiny C programs and combine them together on the shell.
23:52
But windows is modular! See? the tiles fit right into everything!
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked What C++ really is missing is this strong idea of composability.
@Xeo What do you mean?
Xeo
Xeo
You can sequentially "compose" things by writing them one after another in the source and manually linking input and output, but there's no elegant composing available.
Yeah, C++ kinda goes against that philosophy by being a big mastodon.
Not sure if mastodon is a word.
lol
23:54
@Xeo Like the . operator in Haskell?
That's not really relevant
> Mastodons (Greek: μαστός "breast"
you just called C++ a boob.
Xeo
Xeo
@AndyProwl Nah, you can easily write that in C++ (I did once, with Konrad's infix operator lib thingy)
What I mean is that the basic functions aren't building blocks that you can even think about composing with other basic functions.
@Xeo So what do you mean by "elegant composing"?
However, the available tools on the unix shell are kinda arbitrary. If you need a certain job done then you can't decompose systematically down to the shell programs you'll need.
You just throw a few things together.
Only this week I learned about the paste program.
Xeo
Xeo
23:57
@StackedCrooked Thinking of imperative code, where you tell the program what exactly to do how? :P
@AndyProwl See the sentence right above.
@Xeo I still don't understand. Can you provide an example?
Is imperative programming still imperative if you have function overloading?
Xeo
Xeo
@AndyProwl All the <algorithm> functions.
@StackedCrooked ... yes?
@StackedCrooked Why wouldn't it be?
@AndyProwl How would you filter and then map a collection in C++?
user142019
@StackedCrooked Imperative programming is about series of steps that are executed in order, where those steps usually change state (otherwise they're pointless). Functions aren't too relevant.
23:59
Because it makes a huge difference in the abstractions you can make.
@CatPlusPlus You mean, like map f $ filter (>4) xs?

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