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06:00
> Measles outbreak in US highest in 17 years, due primarily to un-vaccinated children
@Rapptz Welcome to Murica
user1804599
@Rapptz That happened in The Netherlands in the Dutch Bible Belt. :P
> "Many young pediatricians might not know what measles looks like," he said.
lol what
I wanted to ask, how is the function composition operator any different from just putting two function next to each other in haskell?
user1804599
@GamesBrainiac Lemme give you an example.
06:05
@not-rightfold Please do, you're the one who convinced me to try haskell out! :P
user1804599
foo bar is like foo(bar). foo . bar is like [] (auto x) { return foo(bar(x)); }.
user1804599
With the exception of laziness.
@not-rightfold The results are the same.
user1804599
@GamesBrainiac No. Look closer.
@not-rightfold Give me a haskell example
user1804599
06:07
qux and [] { return qux; } are not the same thing.
user1804599
@GamesBrainiac f . g = \x -> f (g x)
user1804599
f g = f g
f . g = \x -> f (g x)
Ah, I see now.
Not to mention, it can have only one argument
correct?
user1804599
All functions in Haskell have only one argument.
@not-rightfold I see it! The second one has []{}.
Which the first hasn't.
user1804599
06:10
@StackedCrooked The semantics are different too.
user1804599
The latter is always a function.
Ah.
And it's lazy.
user1804599
Both are lazy.
With the second you got a potential qux vs a qux.
@not-rightfold f a b = a + b -> Two arguments
user1804599
06:13
@GamesBrainiac f a b = a + b is the same as f a = \b -> a + b.
user1804599
One argument!
@not-rightfold Ahh, I see now.
@GamesBrainiac Are you familiar with the concept of currying?
@StackedCrooked Nope, but I get what @not-rightfold was getting at
> In mathematics and computer science, currying is the technique of transforming a function that takes multiple arguments (or a tuple of arguments) in such a way that it can be called as a chain of functions, each with a single argument (partial application).
user1804599
06:14
f a b c = … is syntactic sugar for f = \a -> \b -> \c -> ….
user1804599
Also see lambda calculus.
@not-rightfold I was just about to say that! :P
user1804599
f(a, b) = a + b :P
@not-rightfold I know I'm a little thick here, but how are they different, one is a variable, and the other is a function that returns a variable.
user1804599
@GamesBrainiac Ja.
06:16
Where would you practically use the function composition operator
I mean, in the end, you still get the same variable
user1804599
Well.
notNull = not null and notNull = not . null are they not the same?
user1804599
sortAndReverse = reverse . sort
user1804599
No need to repeat all the arguments!
user1804599
@GamesBrainiac No.
user1804599
06:18
not null = not null
not . null = \x -> not (null x)
user1804599
Function application is not the same thing as function composition.
Arrite what do you get when you appy both function to an empty list and a full list?
user1804599
-- more practical example of function composition
map (\x -> negate (abs x)) [5, -3, -6, 7, -3, 2, -19, 24]
map (negate . abs) [5, -3, -6, 7, -3, 2, -19, 24]
user1804599
@GamesBrainiac You can't.
user1804599
06:20
not null has type Bool, which can't be applied.
user1804599
null has type Bool too, so not . null is a type error. :P
@not-rightfold Works just fine in GHCI
user1804599
What is the type of null?
user1804599
Ohh wait.
user1804599
not null is a type error.
06:24
Prelude> let notNull = not . null
Prelude> not
not      notElem  notNull
Prelude> notNull []
False
user1804599
null :: [a] -> Bool and not :: Bool -> Bool.
user1804599
I thought you made up null. I didn't realise it was the check-whether-list-is-empty function.
Prelude> notNull [1,2,3,4]
True
user1804599
Prelude> :t not . null
not . null :: [a] -> Bool
Prelude> :t not null

<interactive>:1:5:
    Couldn't match expected type `Bool' with actual type `[a0] -> Bool'
    In the first argument of `not', namely `null'
    In the expression: not null
null is a builtin function
06:26
@not-rightfold lol
user1804599
@Rapptz As if I ever use it. :V
I remember not liking the name
@not-rightfold Me gets what function composition is now! :D
Good morning
It makes sense, but it just feels weird.
06:27
Yay!
user1804599
@Rapptz isEmpty?!
@not-rightfold Don't think thats built into haskell
user1804599
OMG OMGOMG.
user1804599
@GamesBrainiac isEmpty = null!
user1804599
06:29
Also, what you refer to as “built-in” is actually just exported by the implicitly-imported Prelude module.
@not-rightfold Holy crap, thats just like a Haskell List! :P
user1804599
@StackedCrooked clean the guy's filthy nails.
Lol those are not mine. I got that pic from /r/mildlyinteresting.
@not-rightfold lol
@Mysticial You watch TWGOK too? Just noticed on your GitHub! :P
user1804599
06:34
Wow, so now I can just do :later 8h and I'm done for today? :P — Igor Popov Dec 29 '11 at 6:59
user1804599
lol
Yeah, but it's a blocking call which takes 8 hours to complete.
Xeo
Xeo
I hate oversleeping when I really don't have the time to spare...
This question appears to be off-topic because the two of you should get a room. — Bart 15 mins ago
Hang on just a little longer. It's almost weekend.
06:40
@GamesBrainiac That's an amazing show. :)
@Mysticial Yea, I love Haqua! :P Although its getting a little too harem-ish
Xeo
Xeo
Haqua~
Also, Kanon
@Xeo Holy shit, you watch too?
@GamesBrainiac Well guess what? I actually like harems. :P:P Yes that makes me a bad person, but I don't care. :)
@Mysticial Whoever said I didn't? :P
06:42
@GamesBrainiac The current season is really good.
And the op song sticks in my head.
@StackedCrooked You too? Holy shit, this is awesome! :D
All the damn time.
@StackedCrooked I skip it. Yea, the first 2 seasons were kinda crap
This one really picked up on the plot
@GamesBrainiac I don't hate it. I like it :)
@StackedCrooked What else you watch?
The song that stuck in my head is Shingeki No Kyojin's first OP
Now that, was awesome.
Xeo
Xeo
06:44
@GamesBrainiac Eh, for that to happen, Keima would need to show any kind of actual interest in the girls. :P
@Xeo Yea, he's glued to his "PFP" lol
One Piece, Hunter x Hunter, Attack on Titan, Silver Spoon, Servant x Serverice, Blood Lad and a bunch of other stuff.
@StackedCrooked Blood Lad is fa-kin-su-pah
damnit i hate not so tired i cant sleep :/ any good articles to read?
Yeah, I like it.
Silver Spoon is a really fine anime.
06:46
Silver Spoon eh?
@StackedCrooked Have you watched Angel Beats?
Sad rite
But not as sad as Clannad?
@Mysticial What do you watch??
Other than TWGOK
0
Q: Pain after writing answer in stack overflow

cokimonI feel a great pain in my groin while writing stack overflow answers and questions. Increase pain when somebody downvotes my questions. why this happen? any help.

3
@Mysticial This was too good.
@Mysticial Crap, you're almost a big of an Otaku as I am! :P
@Mysticial Nice list.
06:50
@StackedCrooked Going to download silver spoon now
I don't have the discipline to keep my mal updated.
@GamesBrainiac I can't promise that you'll like it.
@StackedCrooked Me neither, I just download whatever's there, and watch
@StackedCrooked btw, did you check out @MarkGarcia 's new operator?
Its on Corilu actually
@StackedCrooked hahahahha
Worst of all, the baby is unused.
06:52
@StackedCrooked What a shameful warning message.
Android Studio y u no generate gen folder
Ell
Ell
Why the hell dont people vaccinate their children
@Ell >+++--- I think this is what the operator should look like then
@Ell Because they are not able to differentiate between good science and bad science.
Yay for Coliru! It even allows self-contained git demonstrations /cc @StackedCrooked
1
A: GIT: revert selected commits since a certain commit, release, then reapply them

seheThe most elegant way is to rebase --interactive Update Since you clarified that this isn't even an option, clearly you have revert and cherry-pick left (like an accounted: no deletions, but 'counter-bookings'). This can get tedious, however, GUI tools could help you (I don't know whether Tor...

Morning
@sehe Nice :)
All those "features" that Coliru has.
06:57
@StackedCrooked It's basically a free "somewhat limited" shared hosting environment :/
@sehe Yea. I wonder how he made all of this
@chris BASIC and C? ;)
@GamesBrainiac hubris
@sehe I was thinking his spleen had more to do with it. But I'll take your word for it
@sehe You are using the cpp editor for a bash script. I sometimes do this as well. But ACE allows bash syntax and much more. Perhaps a user-scripts could be useful to change ACE settings without having to resort to the JavaScript console.
User scripts could add a new dimension.
07:01
@StackedCrooked What web framework did you use to make corilou stacked?
Sinatra?
Basically one ruby script and several bash scripts.
Yep Sinatra.
You're a Ruby guy? I thought you were more of a Python guy
I have never programmed in Python. Which is a shame.
@LucDanton still have questions about ZFS? I recommend against dedup, unless you absolutely require it. If you do, calculate required memory FIRST (DDT table size).
Never enable dedup on a pool "just to check", since it cannot be undone
07:03
I just picked ruby because a simple web server example was available which I used as a starting point.
Before Sinatra I was using Mongrel.
Which was not as nice.
@StackedCrooked You might be interested in flask. Its just like sinatra. You probably knew that already.
I like the lack of cruft. (Which is thanks to Sinatra.)
> RuntimeError at /random_image
> You're seeing this error because you have enabled the show_exceptions setting.
You're leaking a bit more server info than necessary
@StackedCrooked Looks very much like flask, except you'd do routing with decorators using @app.route('/') for example
@sehe lol, sorry I should remove those calls
@sehe I'm forwarding exceptions! :)
Ok, I should fix it.
user1804599
07:30
get '/mobile' do |_|
    File.read('mobile.html')
end
user1804599
@StackedCrooked Y u no responsive.
user1804599
I like Sinatra’s simplicity.
user1804599
Although I prefer having a single place with a list of routes, and with PCREs instead of non-PCREs for paths.
user1804599
@GamesBrainiac And Blueprints!
Someone need to come over and walk the overland track with me next months >_<
07:42
@not-rightfold I left for work 30 minutes ago and now I arrived :)
user1804599
@StackedCrooked That's irrelevant. :V
@not-rightfold I'm sorry :(
user1804599
Als je er maar veel spijt van hebt. :)
@not-rightfold That's probably not idiomatic :P
user1804599
Why the _?
user1804599
07:43
get '/mobile' do
    File.read('mobile.html')
end
user1804599
:v
huh
@not-rightfold Don't remember. They are leftover fragments.. (I suck.)
VS refused to bind a temporary to a non-const reference
@DeadMG Is it wrong to refuse that?
07:45
no
but VS has accepted it for some time
Ah, so it's an improvement. I thought you were ranting :)
no
just surprised.
You mean an lvalue reference right?
er, yep.
obviously it should bind to a non-const rvalue reference
@DeadMG You never know with MSVC. :)
07:50
alright
f(x) {
   if (x > 5)
        return f(3);
    return x;
}
I just wrote this and the analyzer didn't barf on it just yet.
I recently read this interview question: design a stack which supports, in addition to push, peek and pop, a "max" operation which returns the biggest element in the stack. all operations must be O(1). You are allowed to use O(N) extra storage for the max feature.
lol, just have two regular stacks,
The tricky part is how to keep max() working when popping elements from the stack.
not if you can use O(N) extra storage.
I think the O(1) is needs to be amortized O(1).
07:52
I want a Jedi robe
I want a society that would silently accept me wearing a jedi robe in public
if you want non-amortized O(1) then just replace std::stack with std::list and you'll get the same basic concept.
@not-rightfold True dat
oh, I guess that code actually produces UB when you insert the first element.
oh well, you get the picture
@DeadMG I'm trying to prove you wrong, but I seem to be failing.
well O(N) extra storage just screams "Keep the list of maxes in another structure".
obviously you could have a number of variations on this theme, but ultimately, O(1) retrieval of the max means you have to cache it, and you can't afford to recompute per element but you can afford to store it.
07:58
@DeadMG Indeed. However, I did not realize that the max list can contain duplicates.
hm
well there's certainly nothing preventing it
My idea was to prepend bigger elements and append smaller elements. However, that would require a sort of the max list after pop.
But the sort would only be needed when popping the max element. So I thought that would make it amortized O(1)
If anyone is willing, then I would be very grateful if you check my answer for remaining sanity (I'm very sleepy): stackoverflow.com/questions/18780324/…
@StackedCrooked Nah, because I could insert a sorted list.
Your solution is really simple though. It's kinda silly I didn't realize it myself.
08:02
ah well, not everybody can be a genius like me
user1804599
My query takes over two seconds. ;_;
Kids these days..
android studio is totally messed up on version 0.2.8
cant even make a goddam project
user1804599
08:17
Hah.
user1804599
Adding an index made the query go four times as fast!
It would be cool if we could do this:
`auto foo = [&](){cout << futureVar << endl;};
int futureVar = 0;
foo();`
no, it would not be cool at all.
it would be hideously error prone and generally dumb and completely unworkable.
user1804599
@Mikhail That'd be a horrible thing.
user1804599
It's like a macro.
08:20
@not-rightfold which what I am currently using . Muhahahahaha! images.sodahead.com/polls/000178651/…
you suck.
user1804599
Your code sucks and you should feel like you suck.
you already said that
@Mikhail DUDE
@Mikhail std::future?
Well.. kinda.
08:25
@Mikhail foo(futureVar);
@ScottW I liked this one amazon.com/ASUS-G750JX-DB71-17-3-Inch-Laptop-Black/dp/…. Weighs a ton but the ROG have support for the 64 gigabytes of ram I need.
Function parameters are an old invention :)
@ScottW A large part of my work involves opening image sequences of tif files and then processing them. Also the gentoo
I knew I shouldn't try to parse things
@Rapptz Yesterday I used simple switch-based state machine parsing for the first time. (It's less advanced than it sounds.) And it worked pretty well.
08:27
I'm having a hard time parsing an if-block
:(
I feel like a noob
@Rapptz What's your code look like?
@Rapptz Parsing code? That's hard I think.
@Rapptz whoa intense. where from?
because yeah, it's more than a tad embarrassing to fail to parse an if block
@DeadMG lol
08:29
We should let astyle handle it :-)
@DeadMG depends on what can be in the parse block. IOW: it depends on the grammar. Silly.
true
but when you say "if block", I expect C-style grammar.
doesn't guarantee it of course
@DeadMG Well, to be fair I can technically parse the if block (the stuff inside works okay) but if I have another if block and the condition isn't met then it executes it anyway.
makes perfect sense
... I guess
Still, I know I'm a big noob when it comes to parsing.
08:30
@Rapptz Ah, well that seems to have nothing to do with parsing. What are you using for code generation?
@sehe I found it on reddit but the captions imply it's from a Russian artist.
@Rapptz You I noticed 1 (2?) russian captions too
sup lounge
08:49
Finally got my thing to work
._.
@Rapptz I doubt it. It's all about a merkin, they just took that kid from russia. ("детский дом" - orphanage)
@Abyx Cool info. Thanks. :O
user1804599
Yay.
user1804599
Made my query twice as fast.
08:58
@not-rightfold Great. Now I'm scared
Aug 22 at 18:50, by ThePhD
The people get me scared because they're so scared.
@not-rightfold you suck
user1804599
@sehe Why?
user1804599
It's still way too slow (260ms) but hey.
It means your query sucked before!

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