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10:02
@Konrad it isn't?
@LucDanton Well of course you could chain functions pairwise and immediately assign a name to the result … that’s a the moral equivalent of manually writing three-address code instead of “normal” expressions, though
^ They actually went and made a LEGO movie.
@R.MartinhoFernandes What isn’t?
Anonymous functions are a convenience. That's all.
They are not any fundamental part of functional programming
user142019
@KonradRudolph No.
10:04
@Insilico aaaaawesome!
user142019
Well, maybe if you can use point-free style instead and that's more readable then it's okay to avoid lambdas.
It actually looks pretty good, I might have to go see it.
user142019
If lambdas are the most readable and best way to do something, use lambdas.
user142019
But just avoiding lambdas for the sake of avoiding lambdas is like avoiding goto for the sake of avoiding goto.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Tell that to Mr Church
10:05
Tell what?
user142019
That.
@R.MartinhoFernandes that lambdas are not fundamental to functional programming
That he used anonymous functions means nothing
The fundamental constructs he used were functions.
@R.MartinhoFernandes No – he formulated lambda calculus
Just functions
10:06
@KonradRudolph Not much of a programmer, was he?
Anonymous is notational
@R.MartinhoFernandes do you have mingw installed on the windows machine you use to connect to github via gitbash?
@LucDanton Didn’t say he was
@R.MartinhoFernandes Notation is everything quite a lot in mathematics
user142019
# Anyway, whether you do
mywhich <- function(x) { return which(a == x) }
l <- sapply(unique(a), mywhich)
# or
l <- sapply(unique(a), function(x) which (a == x))
# who cares they're both equally readable
Can't say I'm invested in that bikeshed. Paint it red.
10:07
It doesn't matter here
@Insilico The 'meatballs' was funny!
> One first simplification is that the λ-calculus treats functions "anonymously", without giving them explicit names.
JBL
JBL
I still can't decide if I consider lambdas syntax too cryptic or not.
user142019
Anyway, he is using an anonymous function.
user142019
He just assigns it to a variable. :)
10:08
@rightfold Agreed. However his answer makes it look as if mywhich is reusable, which it isn’t. If you want to give that function a name (fine!), encapsulate the whole code or GTFO
user142019
Ah scoping, you have a point there.
@rightfold Well that’s the only way of defining functions in R so …
Code isn't any more functional programming because you use lambdas.
@KonradRudolph That's dubious. I've seen and used notation for what amounts to anonymous functions outside of lambda calculus.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, it may be better code though because like I said non-anonymity precludes (function composition and) point-free style
10:11
Precludes?
user142019
What I find more funny about that code is out <- foo; return out instead of just return foo.
@LucDanton That’s a quote from the description in the Wikipedia article. Furthermore, your second sentence doesn’t seem to relate to the first part.
And you seem to imply pointfree style is worse.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Function composition creates more anonymous functions. Unless you assign every intermediate result to a name (“moral equivalent of three-address code”), you are using anonymous functions
@R.MartinhoFernandes … No? On the contrary.
It does. The dubious part being the handling of functions as anonymous as being specific, exclusive, or possibly necessary to lambda calculus.
user142019
10:12
This raises the question of how I should implement lambdas in Gear.
@rightfold The presence of return at all is stupid – in R, everything is an expression, including a function body. No need for return
user142019
Stack frames are garbage collected, I think that helps.
@konrad those anonymous functions are not lambdas
@KonradRudolph Does 'let x = a + b' create an anonymous whatever mathematical entity is relevant to that operator as well?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Okay, I treated the two as synonymous but if you read the original comment we were actually talking about anonymous functions, not lambdas
@LucDanton No but let x = a + b + c does
10:14
@Konrad so are they expressions in Haskell.
@KonradRudolph It does?
return in Haskell in not your parent's return
Xeo
Xeo
Haha
user142019
return is a bad name.
@LucDanton x = (a + b) + ca + b being an anonymous intermediate whatchamacallit.
Xeo
Xeo
10:15
I wonder if they named it return to appeal to imperative programmers, with Monads kinda giving off an imperative feel.
@R.MartinhoFernandes return in R is not Haskell’s return
The semantics of your language are out of whack.
user142019
return in Ruby is not <insert any language here>'s return. :D
Oh @konrad sorry I missed context. Chat is terribly unusable on a phone
@R.MartinhoFernandes “Chat is terribly unusable” … FTFY
10:17
It didn't help that the code he quoted looked like valid Haskell
user142019
@KonradRudolph It could be worse.
user142019
Sky*ugh*pe
Xeo
Xeo
@KonradRudolph I find chat to be pretty usable.
@Xeo This one is a-ok but chat in general is a terrible communication medium
user142019
If I type a message in Skype and the focus is not in the message box it inserts the text into the fucking search bar. Congratulations to the most intuitive UI ever.
Xeo
Xeo
10:20
hm
it’s like cross-thread communication without synchronisation
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold Yay for disjoint conversation windows
user142019
Turn-based chat.
Xeo
Xeo
ugh
user142019
17 hours ago, by rightfold
Thread-safety is for pussies.
10:22
man
I applied back for govt. benefits
they gave me about 1 hours notice to attend a thingy in person
Xeo
Xeo
lol
C++ sucks. I need to write 3 LOC to make a vector of keys of a map. =\
user142019
I severely dislike death
user142019
I read this as "I severely dislike health." :v
10:27
@KonradRudolph To give you perspective I don't think there's anyone that has ever made the claim that they prefer let plus_3 = plus 3 in plus_3 4 over plus 3 4.
@LucDanton Yes, but I’m claiming that never using lambdas essentially results in such code
Now that's just a wrong and dumb thing to say.
user142019
Lambdas are good if used wisely and if you avoid them even in cases where they are the best choice you suck case closed.
@LucDanton It’s neither. Would you define add1 if you needed to increment all items in a list by 1?
Xeo
Xeo
map (+1) xs~
10:31
It's not about me.
user142019
@Xeo I like map succ xs. :)
Xeo
Xeo
Yay generalisation
user142019
But that works because it's an instance of Enum.
The point is that someone advocating that a) they would b) they prefer that style would be fine with e.g. plus 3 4. So it's really about lambda abstractions, not 'intermediate' functions.
@LucDanton Well then: do you think that code doing this is as good as code using an anonymous function?
10:32
@KonradRudolph It's not about that either.
user142019
# I prefer this:
map(lambda x: x + 1, xs)
# Over this:
def add1(x):
    return x + 1
map(add1, xs)
@LucDanton Oh, but it absolutely is. The original post I was referring to seems to imply exactly that. If I understood OP correctly, he would do just that
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold And I like sections and partial application built into the language. Learning Haskell is spoiling me. :(
user142019
I was thinking of adding sections to Gear.
sections?
user142019
10:38
But I'm not sure if it's worth it since I'm already planning std::bind-like placeholders; e.g. reduce(xs, $0 + $1) instead of reduce(xs, fun (x, y) -> x + y).
2
Xeo
Xeo
(+1)
A shorthand for \x -> x + 1 basically
user142019
@DeadMG partial application of binary operators.
Anyway in one of my programs made up of 4-5 files only two of them have lambda expressions. As I've said, it's really hard to care for that bikeshed.
parsing that in a C-style grammar language is going to be terrible.
@rightfold Nice concept, I’ve thought about something similar but it becomes very complicated with nested anonymous functions
Xeo
Xeo
10:39
@rightfold reduce(xs, (+))!
user142019
Elixir has it but uses & instead of $ and starts at 1 instead of 0.
Perl also has it
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG [](+1)! :D
user142019
@KonradRudolph It's for simple expressions.
@rightfold Yes, for simple expressions it’s unbeatable but I’m still interested in a general-purpose concept
user142019
10:41
Good point about the nested anonymous functions though.
I’m working on and off on a stream processing language and I don’t want to stuff its syntax too fully so I will not provide two independent syntaxes for lambdas
@KonradRudolph Same, but with De Bruijn indices obviously!
user142019
@KonradRudolph What does it look like? The language in general.
user142019
I like the piping operator in F# and Elixir; foo(x) |> bar(y) |> baz(z) is a synonym for baz(bar(foo(x), y), z).
(╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻ new interface with a requirement to perform a bulk action faster then what we will use perform these actions
10:44
@rightfold Bash. 1:10 | map $0 + 1 | io.print
numbers pulled out of their arse
oh fuck that
user142019
@KonradRudolph Similar to |> but without >. :P
user142019
Neat.
I actually just looked it up, I was using |> as the piping operator, not |
so it looks identical to Elixir :D
(and this is the first time I’ve heard about Elixir)
user784668
10:44
@rightfold let x |> y = y x?
well, F# also uses it
user142019
There are only eight questions about Elixir on Stack Overflow. It's a great language that nobody in the world uses.
user142019
It's less popular than Haskell.
user142019
@Fanael Not sure.
user142019
It forwards it as the first argument, not the last.
10:45
@LucDanton Nice concept
user142019
So f |> map [1..10] would not work in your case.
user784668
Oh.
As a disclaimer I tacked on the 'obviously' as a joke because I've never been able to parse those indices in my head.
user142019
But yeah, in Haskell your approach would work since it's conventional to pass functions first.
user142019
So [1..10] |> map f.
user142019
10:46
You rarely need to pipe through a function, if ever.
@LucDanton Yeah, not sure how practical that is but it’s indeed the “obvious” solution
user142019
(|>) = flip ($) :)
@Luc And that was indeed what I came up with (without knowing the name) and discarded it as unparseable
user784668
@rightfold flip id
I stumbled onto it when wondering about bind expressions, so really the same path.
user142019
10:47
@Fanael :P
user784668
ahahahahahahahahaha
user784668
0
Q: C++ on Windows ME

Helder ArmandoI have a Windows Vista computer and a Millennum Edition one. I want to start programming in C++ on Windows ME. I tried to find an answer but I didn't find one. The question is... How can I install a (preferably from Microsoft) C++ compiler and libraries for my windows ME? Sorry for the low info

user142019
@Fanael Time to upgrade to Gentoo!
user784668
Too localized.
Incidentally, I never finished the parser for my language because Boost.Qi seems to offer no trivial way of parsing if x distinct from ifx
user142019
10:49
Windows ME > Windows Vista
JBL
JBL
@Fanael And it's an understatement...
user142019
@KonradRudolph Try monadic parser combinators.
@rightfold … in C++?
user142019
I have done it in C++ and it worked.
user142019
But it was far from readable or pleasant.
user142019
10:50
Slightly better in D (which is what I'm doing for Gear) but still shitty.
hmm. I’d imagine with a good library it might be quite readable, but I know of no such library for C++ – Qi is pretty much the best parser generator for complex grammars in C++
Why is this called lounge<HODOR> instead of Lounge<C++>?
user142019
Make your grammar less complex!
user142019
@RyanTheLeach Because we like making fun of everything.
HODOR!
@rightfold Calling that grammar complex is already stretching it. It fits in ~ 100 lines of Boost.Qi
user142019
10:52
@KonradRudolph Are you serious?
@rightfold Yes. It’s deliberately simple.
user142019
So it basically ignores whitespace and acts as if it wasn't there?
@rightfold Well like I said, Boost.Qi has no good way of delimit operators
For instance, my grammar contains the following declaration:
user142019
Hmm.
    function =
        "function" > id > params > "=" > expression;
which works perfectly
BUT it allows me to write functionf = abc, and treats it like function f = abc
user142019
10:54
Oh, I see.
user142019
Well, you could write a word parser that grabs as much as possible.
Boost.Qi lacks a parser keyword which would allow me to write keyword("function") > id > params …
user142019
Basically, if you say word("function") then it peeks after n and if it finds another symbol that's allowed in identifiers, it errors.
and apparently it’s far from trivial to write such a parser efficiently … I asked sehe a while back and he linked me to some discussions of the problem
anyway … lunch
later!
user142019
Goodbye.
10:59
@KonradRudolph They should be two distinct tokens versus one distinct token.
user142019
@KonradRudolph How about this?
^ that is how most languages handle it
Also, the parser might be slow if you have a grammar state transition for every character of input.
Lol, Lounge<HODOR>
so, I just saw this
11:14
@melak47 "This will not only prevent against perverts, it’ll definitely also result in preventing handsome guys from approaching you." - yes, because guys are either pervs or handsome...
2
well I'm off to see WGP
tata
wgp?
wild girly party...
Wacky General Practitioner?
11:16
win32 guru programmer?
Worlds greasiest Pizza?
Yes I'm hungry
Knowing the puppy, pizza is probably what it's
11:33
Worthless government people
Xeo
Xeo
^
Puppy said something about financial aid from the government
Wide Girth Penis
Oh Puppy you~
12:06
HODOR?
WTHODOR?
I'm going to attempt to implement Regex in Warcraft III's JASS language soon if my apprentice fails at it.
lol, I just realised I have one of my questions tagged with both and
Why?
It's useful for advanced player chat commands
Why could I have asked this questions on so, I want a gold badge on SO :(
12:11
@thecoshman I was going to get the Unsung Hero badge, but then people started upvoting my shit ;_;
@Magtheridon96 lol
Meh gold badges
THEY'RE COOL OKAY
shut up mr all the badges!
@rightfold Hmm, sehe actually sent me this … it seems to fit the bill, not sure why I haven’t incorporated it … maybe because I was hunting for a more automated way of defining keywords without having to put them all into explicit parser directives.
user142019
12:15
-- I always specify keywords like this (although in monadic style, but you get the point):
kwFunction = lexeme $ string "function"
kwLet = lexeme $ string "let"
user142019
I.e. I have one parser for each keyword.
user142019
I put this stuff in Lex.hs instead of Parse.hs. I prefer not to have such literals in Parse.hs.
interesting … I’d love to do this in a more automated fashion but hey, it’s not really all that necessary
I can always just define a directive keyword which wraps the distinct directive for me
but now that I think about it I’ll probably do the same as you
user142019
I also put parsers for literals and operators and stuff in Lex.hs. I use Parse.hs for parsers that emit AST nodes.
Ok...I have one potential problem here.
12:26
Get it out
On UNIX machines (that are not Linux), it is possible I will not have support for GCC's __attribute__((visibility("hidden"))).
Now, if I link my shared library with a gSOAP run time library, will gSOAP run time functions be exported from my shared library as well?
I think they will.
The problem is I cannot know that the application that is loading my shared library is not linking with gSOAP run time code of a different gSOAP version as well.
This sounds like trouble, if the linker resolves the soap_*() functions in my shared library to the versions loaded earlier by the application.
inline namespaces ♥
I heart you heart.
Hmm, I guess I could use linker scripts.
Are linker scripts supported by other linkers than GNU ld?
user784668
@wilx Are GNU ld linker scripts supported by other linkers than GNU ld? Are you serious?
12:54
@Fanael: I have never said "GNU ld linker scripts". Get off your high horse.
Beside that, why not? A feature can be invented in one product and implemented in many others.
@wilx I have had this happen on AIX. I recall that IBM's Visual-Age XlC++ compiler had a 'workaround' (that reminded me of .DEF export files, but somehow could be made using the output of nm? loose recollection there)
That was ~XlC++ 7/8
@wilx Dynamic loading :)
> not-sehe
> 1823
__NOTOC__ Year 1823 (MDCCCXXIII) was a common year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Gregorian Calendar and a common year starting on Monday of the 12-day slower Julian calendar. Events January–March * January – In Paviland Cave on the Gower Peninsula of Wales, William Buckland discovers the "Red Lady of Paviland", the first identification of a prehistoric (male) human burial. * February 3 – Gioachino Rossini's Semiramide is first performed. * February 10 –; First worldwide carnival parade took place in Cologne, Germany. * Fe...
yup
oh, it's 1825 now
@not-sehe: Thanks for the pointers. I shall investigate that. AIX is one of the supported platforms, IIRC.
user142019
13:08
Mutual recursion in F# is really the ugliest thing you can imagine.
user142019
let rec foo =
    bar
and bar =
    if condition then foo else []
user142019
Same with types. :puke:
Banana split
Banana split is how I was thought mutual recursion
Dammit
Taught to analyse mutusl recirsion
Fuck
Fshvdjbcd g v
2
Xeo
Xeo
Just give up.
Why are you on mobile anyways?
13:11
Because I'm on West Germany and did not bring my laptop
our uni has now a 10 page forum thread
Xeo
Xeo
Oh. What are you doing over here?
where people just hate each other because some folks got free exam pass
did not is easier to type than didn't
Xeo
Xeo
Wow...
Wait, that sentence actually makes sense
13:12
PDF Association Technical Conference
Xeo
Xeo
Missing quotes, but makes sense
Not gonna add quotes and make it all worse
Xeo
Xeo
ahaha
not-sehe editing sehe's posts?
user142019
Is there a shorthand for let! _ = m in F#?
13:18
@Magtheridon96 Yeah. Not-sehe being logged on, it's basically what happens :|
I don't understand why I'm still getting points for edits. I don't think I ever edited anything with the sehe account, or "edit credits" have been invented after that?
It annoys me anyways, since edits should not be honoured with rep, per se. It's a bad bad idea
user142019
Bah F# sucks.
user142019
Stupid significant compilation order.
@not-sehe you could just bo back to your old account y'know
@rightfold But it's an opensource programming language!
user142019
:P
13:20
how can a language be opensource?
@BartekBanachewicz I think I will. Someday. After I am confident that I can resist the lure of all the inbox notifcations
Edits give rep up to 2000 only
@not-sehe write a usercript that will hide them :3
What does "open-source programming language" even mean?
I regret I asked.
13:22
@BartekBanachewicz Waste more time. Nah, I'm good. And with that, I'll leave for flute lessons with my daughter.
well, see ya around.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah. I don't think I ever edited anything before I reached 2k with my real account
Cheers
user142019
~/gear [ cat compilation_order.txt                                    ] 3:22 pm
src/ast.fs
src/parser_combinators.fs
src/lex.fs
src/gear.fs

~/gear [ fsharpc `cat compilation_order.txt`
user142019
:v
user142019
13:23
You suck at typing.
In multiple senses
@rightfold why?
user142019
Because you're on a mobile phone.
0
Q: Logging messages from C++ to Java

dablakI have a library in C++ which is being used by a Java app through JNI. In the Java app I'm using logback to produce logs. Now I need to log the C++ library messages as well and I have to do it in the same file used by Java so I can have everything in chronological order. My current approach, no...

I meant to type a 'u' followed by another followed by an 'o' followed by a 'c'
user142019
13:25
Oh.
Afaics that's what I typed
It stands for useless use of cat
3
user142019
Didn't know that acronym. Why is it useless?
user142019
Is there another way to read command-line arguments from a file?
Because there's an alternative and there is no such thing as useless use of xargs
user142019
Oh well, this works.
user142019
13:27
@KonradRudolph arguments, not stdin.
Googling reveals that Useless Use of xargs is indeed a thing
Anyway $(< file)
user142019
Thanks.
how does someone provide an end date for college if they haven't graduated?
@Crowz Projected date of graduation
yeah the website was being stupid
13:33
It's the same as foo - foo * 3. Since there is no =, the value of foo is not changed. — nouney 1 min ago
user142019
I love (or hate?) it when I google "string to char list f#" it finds "f# - How To Change List of Chars To String? - Stack Overflow", "f# - Convert a list of characters (or array) to a string - Stack Overflow" and "F#, char seq -> strings - Stack Overflow".
I think hate is what you mean
14:10
foo->bar->id gets me invalid use of incomplete type if bar is forward-declared I can't get to it from a method calling on foo right?
user142019
If decltype(foo->bar) is incomplete then you can't access the members of foo->bar.
Xeo
Xeo
I shouldn't have expected anything less.
But you only have one?
Yeah.
I change from time to time.
Xeo
Xeo
No, I mean, one screen?
Or do you have the same wallpaper on all of them?
Same wallpaper on both screens.
Xeo
Xeo
mhm
14:24
(Damn, I can't wait for that coffee to kick in)
Xeo
Xeo
I got three different ones
I only have two monitors, though.
Xeo
Xeo
Although one is the BG of my Linux VM
Me too
But that's enough for me: one for VS, one for the Lounge.
this library is confusing. It lets me set things that I then can't retrieve.
14:32
anyone here know lua?
user142019
Is the library called MongoDB?
user142019
@LuchianGrigore @BartekBanachewicz
would if (smth) and if (smth != 0) be the same?
user142019
If it is, then Lua sucks.
what do you mean?
they're basically the same in C++?
user142019
14:34
Integers are not Booleans.
@LuchianGrigore Doesn't mean it's good.
Implicit conversion from integer to boolean is a mistake.
user142019
Implicit conversion is a mistake.
Depends.
I like upcasting.
user142019
> Inheritance.
@rightfold no libftdi1. not to be confused with libftdi which is "out of date" but still apt-get-able
JBL
JBL
14:38
Uh oh... ? Assuming I have an std::vector<int> vector, I can pass &vector[0] when an int* is expected ?
@JBL Yes.
Since C++03, IIRC.
JBL
JBL
It feels quite a bit wrong, as in "the implementation makes it possible".
user142019
@JBL No.
JBL
JBL
(I also may be an idiot, still it feels wrong..)
user142019
&vector[0] is UB if the vector is empty.
user142019
14:40
Use my_vector.data(). This always works even if there are no elements.
@JBL Vectors are guaranteed by the standard to have their elements contiguous in memory.
JBL
JBL
@rightfold Noted, thanks !
@rightfold I systematically resize it before though (but that'd still be better to use data() I think).
user142019
Just use .data(). It has the second advantage that it's less ugly.
JBL
JBL
Yep.
user142019
Note that I say "less ugly", not "beautiful", since it's still C++.
user142019
14:44
Cooool new version of OTP!
JBL
JBL
@rightfold Right.
@rightfold Makes me think : I truly enjoy C++, does it qualify as some kind of morbid fascination ?
user142019
More like some kind of horrific masochism.
JBL
JBL
Meh...
@LuchianGrigore sort of
JBL
JBL
I wouldn't go as far as trying to write a C++ parser...
14:51
@LuchianGrigore no
if (smth) is equal to if (smth != nil)
0 is not nil
Lua 5.1.4  Copyright (C) 1994-2008 Lua.org, PUC-Rio
> a = 0; if (a) then print"foo" end
foo
user142019
@JBL you can't.
user142019
It's impossible to write a C++ parser.
JBL
JBL
Uh ?
impossible to write in reasonable time for one person
it's a few thousand man-hours to write one that's not a toy
JBL
JBL
Oh ok.
14:57
@BartekBanachewicz thx, figured it out ;)
JBL
JBL
Thought "parser" wasn't the correct word in my sentence.
@LuchianGrigore np, if you have anything more WRT Lua ask :)

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